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・ Anthology (The Jackson 5 album)
・ Anthology (The Miracles album)
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Anthology Film Archives
・ Anthology of American Folk Music
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・ Anthology of Modern Serbian Lyric
・ Anthology of Planudes
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Anthology Film Archives : ウィキペディア英語版
Anthology Film Archives

Anthology Film Archives is an international center for the preservation, study, and exhibition of film and video, with a particular focus on independent, experimental, and avant-garde cinema.〔("About/Overview" ) ''Anthology Film Archives'' website.〕 The film archive and theater is located at 32 Second Avenue on the southeast corner of East 2nd Street, in a New York City historic district in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan.
==History==

Anthology Film Archives evolved from roots and visions that date from the early 1960s, when Lithuanian artist Jonas Mekas, the founder and director of the Film-makers’ Cinematheque, a showcase for avant-garde films, dreamed of establishing a permanent home where the growing number of new independent and avant-garde films could be shown on a regular basis. This dream became a reality in 1969 when Jerome Hill, P. Adams Sitney, Peter Kubelka, Stan Brakhage, and Jonas Mekas drew up plans to create a museum dedicated to the vision of the art of cinema as guided by the avant-garde sensibility. A Film Selection committee – James Broughton, Ken Kelman, Peter Kubelka, Jonas Mekas, and P. Adams Sitney – was formed to establish a definitive collection of films (The Essential Cinema Repertory) and to determine the structure of the new institution.〔("About/History" ) ''Anthology Film Archives'' website.〕
Anthology opened on November 30, 1970 at Joseph Papp’s Public Theater with Jerome Hill as its sponsor. After Hill’s death in 1974, Anthology relocated to 80 Wooster Street in SoHo. Pressed by the need for more adequate space, it acquired its present home, a former municipal courthouse, in 1979. Under the guidance of the architects Raimund Abraham and Kevin Bone and at a cost of $1,450,000, the building was adapted to house two motion picture theaters, a reference library, a film preservation department, offices, and a gallery, opening to the public on October 12, 1988.〔
In 1998 New York University film students began NewFilmmakers,〔(''NewFilmmakers New York'' ) website.〕 which became a popular weekly series having screened many thousands of documentary, short, and feature films.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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