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Department of Art History & Archæology,
Graduate School of Arts & Science
The goal of the Department of Art History and Archæology
is to explore the history of art and architecture across
a
broad historical, cultural, geographic, and methodological
spectrum. The Visual Media Center supports these efforts
by working with faculty to develop a broad range of digital
teaching
and learning resources from basic course Web sites to advanced
databases, computer-generated models and animations as well
as video productions.
[www.columbia.edu/cu/arthistory]
Archæology Center, Graduate School of Arts &
Sciences
Archæology is uncovering the past through its material
remainsthe people, histories and deep sequences that
antiquity offers. It is an anthropology of the past, entangled
with the parallel issues of subjectivity, politics and multivocality.
At Columbia, Archæology is a multidisciplinary field
practiced by faculty and students in the social sciences,
natural sciences, and humanitites. At present, there are faculty
in the departments of Anthropology, Art History and Archæology,
Classics, Historic Preservation, History, Middle Eastern Languages
and Cultures, the Center for Environmental Research and Conservation,
and the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory who conduct research
on prehistory, ancient society, or historical Archæology.
Students and faculty work not only in New York City, but around
world.
[www.columbia.edu/cu/archaeology]
Historic Preservation Program:
Graduate School of Architecture, Planning & Preservation
The Columbia Master of Science degree in Historic Preservation
is the oldest degree of its kind in the United States. The
program is comprehensive, providing specialized training for
those who wish to be professionally active in any aspect of
the field of preservation. The fundamental concerns of the
program are for (1) the accurate understanding of the vital
contributions of surviving architecture, townscape, and landscape
to the identity and well-being of living communities; and
(2) the protection of those contributions through the scrupulous
conservation of buildings, neighborhoods, and
landscapes that express meanings from the past to us and to
the future. The program offers training in the management
of cultural resources, including the identification and protection
of valuable surviving elements of the past ranging from interiors
and furnishings to entire urban and rural regions. At the
heart of the program lies the belief that training for professional
practice must combine a sound footing in basic techniques
and a firm grasp of theory, with appropriate specialization.
[www.learn.columbia.edu/hp]
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 
Lamont is linked to Columbia's Department of Earth and Environmental
Sciences, whose graduate students pursue research at the Observatory.
scientists play vital roles in advising students, directing
student research, and enhancing the intellectual firepower
of the outstanding education and research program. Lamont
scientists also collaborate with two affiliated institutions,
the American Museum of Natural History and the NASA Goddard
Institute for Space Studies.
[www.ldeo.columbia.edu]
Save Venice Inc.
Save Venice was founded in 1967 by the late John and Betty
McAndrew and Sydney J. Freedberg in response to the terrible
damage caused by the flood of the preceding November. In 1967
more than 30 international committees were formed under the
umbrella of UNESCO to restore and protect Venice's threatened
masterpieces. Originally part of the Venice Committee of the
International Fund for Monuments, in 1971 the board members
formed a new tax-exempt organization, Save Venice Inc. Each
year, the Superintendents for the Artistic and Historic Heritage
of Venice and for the Architectural Heritage of Venice, along
with church leaders, interested citizens and friends of Save
Venice suggest works of art and buildings in need of restoration.
The board of Save Venice then chooses which projects to sponsor
according to artistic merit and urgency of need.
[www.savevenice.org]
World Monuments Fund
World Monuments Fund (WMF) safeguards the heritage of mankind
by encouraging the conservation and preservation of culturally
and historically significant works of art and architecture
worldwide. Founded in 1965, WMF works with public and private-sector
partners and hasorchestrated major projects in over 69 countries.
Past and present projects include: the Temple of Preah Khan
in the Historic City of Angkor, Cambodia; Church of St. Trophime,
Arles, France; Tower of Belem, Lisbon, Portugal; and many
sites in Venice. WMF is a New York-based private, nonprofit
organization with offices in Paris and Venice and independent
affiliates in Britain, France, Portugal, and Spain.
World Monuments Watch, a global program launched in 1995,
calls attention to imperiled cultural heritage sites around
the world and directs timely financial support to their preservation.
A panel of leading international experts selects the List
of 100 Most Endangered Sites from nominations submitted to
WMF every two years by governments, organizations active in
the field of cultural preservation, and individuals.
WMF's activities include documentation and surveys, field
research, training, strategic planning, fundraising, and advocacy.
[www.wmf.org]
Department of History, Graduate School of Arts & Sciences

The Columbia Department of History has been one of the nations
leading centers of historical research and teaching since
the beginning of the twentieth century. We enter the new century
committed to maintaining our distinguished traditions of important
scholarship in many fields and of committed teaching of both
undergraduates and graduate students. We are also committed
to exploring new and emerging areas of scholarship, to experimenting
with disciplinary innovations, and to exploring the possibility
of creating more international histories, less bound than
traditional scholarship to national boundaries.
[www.columbia.edu/cu/history]
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| Arthur Weegee,
Drunken men in the Bowery, c. 1943. |
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