AUSTIN--The University of Texas School of Information announces the
appointment of professor Caroline Frick as the interim director of the
William and Margaret Kilgarlin Center for the Preservation of the
Cultural Record. A member of the UT faculty since 2007, Dr. Frick holds
joint appointments on the faculties of the School of Information and the
College of Communication department of radio, television, and film.
An internationally recognized expert in motion picture archives and
preservation, Dr. Frick's research and teaching interests focus on the
evolution of the moving image archiving movement, cross-cultural
approaches to historical preservation, and digital media libraries. She
is the founder and executive director of the Texas Archive of the Moving
Image, an organization devoted to the discovery and preservation of
media related to the state. Prior to her work in Texas, Dr. Frick
worked in film preservation at Warner Bros., the Library of Congress,
and the National Archives in Washington, D.C. Dr. Frick also programmed
films for American Movie Classics cable channel and served as a director
of the Board for the Association of Moving Image Archivists. Her book on
film preservation, "Saving Cinema," is forthcoming from Oxford
University Press.
"We are delighted to have Caroline at the helm of this important center
at this crucial time when economic downturns threaten scholarship in
cultural records more than many other areas," said Dean Dillon. "Dr.
Frick's expertise will add a significant new dimension to the work of
the Kilgarlin Center, which is already known for its leadership in paper
and book conservation."
The Kilgarlin Center was established with a $1 million endowment from
former Texas Supreme Court Justice William Kilgarlin in 2004. The
center's mission is to advance the preservation of the record of human
experience, creativity, and discovery through education, research, and
outreach.
"Since its creation, the Kilgarlin Center for the Preservation of the
Cultural Record has played a key role in strengthening and focusing
attention upon preservation issues within The University of Texas at
Austin community as well as across the nation and around the world,"
said Dr. Frick. " I am pleased to have the opportunity to build upon the
Center’s initial success and to assist in furthering its increasingly
critical mission."
Dr. Frick replaces Kilgarlin Center founding director, Ellen
Cunningham-Kruppa, who is currently pursuing a doctorate in American
Studies at UT Austin.