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- News Story about Henry Ford's Revival of Old-Fashioned Music and Dancing, July 1925 -

- July 11, 1925
- Collections - Artifact
News Story about Henry Ford's Revival of Old-Fashioned Music and Dancing, July 1925
- Correspondence about Publishing Bell Laboratories Research on Computer-Generated Film and Video for Art, 1979 - Lillian Schwartz is a pioneer of computer-generated art. From 1969-2002, she was a "resident visitor" at Bell Laboratories, producing groundbreaking films, videos, and multimedia works. The Schwartz Collection spans Lillian's childhood into her late career, documenting an expansive mindset, mastery over traditional and experimental mediums alike--and above all--an ability to create inspirational connections between science, art, and technology.

- February 22, 1979
- Collections - Artifact
Correspondence about Publishing Bell Laboratories Research on Computer-Generated Film and Video for Art, 1979
Lillian Schwartz is a pioneer of computer-generated art. From 1969-2002, she was a "resident visitor" at Bell Laboratories, producing groundbreaking films, videos, and multimedia works. The Schwartz Collection spans Lillian's childhood into her late career, documenting an expansive mindset, mastery over traditional and experimental mediums alike--and above all--an ability to create inspirational connections between science, art, and technology.
- Research Material about the 1983 Atari Video Game Burial, 1983-2011 - In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. This document captures the history of the world's first video game excavation.

- 1983-2011
- Collections - Artifact
Research Material about the 1983 Atari Video Game Burial, 1983-2011
In 1983, rumors circulated: Atari was bankrupt, and was dumping truckloads of games into a New Mexico landfill. Victim to the "Video Game Crash," the company buried 700,000 cartridges in the desert. The story became an obscure pop culture legend -- until "The Atari Tomb" was unearthed in 2014. This document captures the history of the world's first video game excavation.
- Major Maintenance Study for the Edison Institute, Dearborn, Michigan, November 1979 -

- November 01, 1979
- Collections - Artifact
Major Maintenance Study for the Edison Institute, Dearborn, Michigan, November 1979