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The
sixth installment of The Archaeology Channel International
Film and Video Festival will take place May 8-12,
2012, in the Recital Hall of The Shedd Institute,
in downtown Eugene, Oregon, USA. This event is
the only international competition in the Western
Hemisphere featuring films on archaeology and
indigenous peoples. (Scroll down to learn more
about the Festival.) We invite you and your organization
to be a part of this unique event by joining our
sponsorship group. Sponsorship opportunities
and benefits are listed on our Sponsorship
Commitment Form and at the bottom of this
page.
Similar festivals
exist in several European countries, but our Festival
is the only one on this side of the planet. As
a corporate or organizational sponsor helping
to make this event the success it can be, you
will be acknowledged in our Festival program,
in our on-screen slide show, and on
The Archaeology Channel
(http://www.archaeologychannel.org),
which is the most popular Web site of its kind
in the world. Other benefits to you are listed
on the Sponsorship Commitment Form.
Please
help us make the Festival a grand success. Thanks
very much for your consideration.
More About TAC Festival
What
is it?
The
Archaeology Channel
International Film and Video Festival is the only
public competition in the Western Hemisphere featuring
films about the human past and our shared cultural
heritage. This international event draws worldwide
participation. Our 2012 edition represents the
ninth annual installment of this event. For the
2012 Festival edition, we expect to receive dozens
of film entries from many countries and will screen
the best of these for the May competition. As
part of this event, we again will host an internationally
acclaimed Keynote Speaker, Dr. Mark Van Stone,
Professor of Art History at Southwestern College
in Chula Vista, California, speaking on the real
meaning of the Maya calendar and the real significance
of 2012. Again this year, will conduct a field
tour to the Cascadia Cave rock art site. In 2012,
as we do each year, we plan a suite of complementary
activities at the University of Oregon Baker Downtown
Center, which will include our Conference on Cultural
Heritage Film, and our Video Bar, where all can
see any of our film entries at individual viewing
stations.
When
and Where?
The ninth installment
of TAC Festival will be held May 8-12, 2012.
Film screenings take place in the Recital Hall
at The Shedd Institute, in downtown Eugene. Other
Festival activities take place at the University
of Oregon Baker Downtown Center and elsewhere
in the local area, including guided tours on the
Willamette National Forest.
Why
is it?
To exhibit for our audiences the wonderful diversity of human cultures
past and present in the exploration of our place
in history and in our world. As a structured
display of culture both in terms of heritage and
the visual arts, this event excites and educates
audiences about the human cultural legacy and
encourages their support of heritage preservation.
By demonstrating the many ways of being human,
we promote a sense of tolerance and brotherhood
among people of different geographic and ethnic
backgrounds.
To promote this film genre and the makers of film and video productions
about archaeology and indigenous peoples. The
Festival encourages and inspires film producers
to create more works exploring the human past
and human cultural diversity
To foster cultural literacy and promote diversity for all ages by broadening
their outlook and understanding of other peoples,
their cultural lifeways, and their diverse relationships
with the natural world. Such knowledge of the
human past can inform future choices and behaviors
in our relations to each other and to the earth.
Who
benefits?
The benefits
of the Festival extend well beyond the immediate
pleasures of the viewing audience and out into
the wider community.
The focus on the surprising diversity of cultures that exist and have
existed on our planet benefits audience members
by enriching their knowledge of the human cultural
legacy.
This high-quality program meets the need for Eugene to develop a strong
downtown with dynamic cultural activities that
will attract tourism and investment into the future.
In fact, the Festival is exactly the kind of cultural
activity encouraged by the Eugene Downtown Plan.
The Convention and Visitors Association of Lane County estimates an
annual net financial gain of
250,000 for the community from the Festival.
This is good for the Lane County and Oregon economies
and additional support for the non-profit sector,
which provides 12.2 percent of all Lane County
jobs.
The state of Oregon and Lane County benefit from the prestige of having
an international film festival within their borders.
The Archaeology Channel International Film and Video Festival bridges the past and present
and positions Oregon as a key meeting ground for
this important cultural dialogue.
This event creates a positive impression of our community and our state
at the international level and generates continued
community support for the festival. Because this
is the first and only competitive festival of
its kind in all of the Western Hemisphere, it
puts Oregon on the map as a cultural leader in
our nation.
The films offer an arena for indigenous groups and their often-ignored
stories to be voiced and heard. Films presented
illustrate the many faces of humanity and demonstrate
that although human cultures are distinct, we
are indeed all one people. By including indigenous
peoples and cultural representatives from different
countries, we provide a forum for inter-cultural
dialogue and diverse cultural perspectives.
TAC Festival affords producers and directors from around the world
the opportunity to present their works to live
audiences in a juried festival and to learn from
each other through our Conference on Cultural
Heritage Film, thus encouraging the production
of more and better works in this important film
genre.
Our worldwide participants and presenters create the opportunity for
a global dialogue concerning diversity, art and
culture. The cross-cultural exchange that occurs
among international participants, cultural representatives
and our Oregon audiences is a contribution to
the pan-human culture evolving in the 21st
Century and is an educational resource for young
and old.
How
do sponsors benefit?
Sponsors of
TAC Festival will gain visibility to our audience
in a wide variety of ways, depending on the level
of their sponsorship. Sponsors will be acknowledged
in these ways:
In the Festival Program. All sponsors will be listed by name in the
Program and have the option to include their logos
there. Sponsors also have the option to reserve
space in the Program for special display messages.
The Festival slide show. These slides, including still images with
sponsor logos and messages, will scroll before
screenings and during intermissions on the big
screen in the Recital Hall.
From the podium. All sponsors
will be announced from the Recital Hall podium
during the introduction for each Festival session.
On The
Archaeology Channel
Web site. All sponsors will be listed, either
by text name or graphic logo linked to their own
Web sites, on the TAC
Festival page .
Sponsors wishing to gain visibility
in local communities around Oregon can also support
the ArchaeologyFest Film Series (AFFS), which
takes each year’s top TAC Festival films to venues
in six Oregon communities: Ashland, Bend, Eugene,
and Portland. AFFS sponsors will be featured
on the TAC pages devoted to the venues that they
sponsor.
Depending
on contribution level, sponsors will receive complimentary
benefits, which may include
Tickets for film screenings
A special Vendor Informational
table in The Shedd Institute Living Room
A private dinner reception
to celebrate and mingle with Festival presenters
A festival award in the sponsor’s
name
A listing, logo, banner, or
page in the Festival program
Passes to the Awards Reception
A banner or message in the
Festival slide show on the big screen
Acknowledgement from the podium
in The Shedd Institute Recital Hall
A Festival page logo and link
on The Archaeology Channel
(www.archaeologychannel.org)
TAC Festival 2012
Sponsor Levels and Benefits
Level
Benefit |
Hominid
($50) |
Paleolithic
($100) |
Paleolithic
Plus ($150) |
Archaic
($250) |
Archaic
Plus ($400) |
Neolithic
($500) |
Classical
($1000) |
Industrial
($2500) |
Modern
($5000) |
| Program
text listing |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
| Program
logo |
|
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
| Program
Display Message |
|
|
Optional
1/4 page |
Optional
1/2 page |
Optional
full page |
Optional
full page |
Optional
full page or back cover |
Optional
full page or back cover |
Optional
full page or back cover |
| Two
passes to Awards Reception |
|
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
| Festival
Slide Show |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
| TAC
Web site listing |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
| Podium
mention |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
x |
| Tickets
for film screenings |
|
1 |
|
2 |
|
4 |
6 |
10 |
15 |
| Listing
on mini-Festival venue page |
x |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Vendor
Informational Table |
|
|
|
|
|
|
x |
x |
x |
| Private
dinner reception |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x |
x |
| Festival
award in sponsor’s name |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x |
|