The museum's holdings comprise more than 400,000
photographs and
negatives dating from the invention of photography to the present day; 28,000 motion picture films; three million other cinematic objects, including letters, scripts, musical scores, lobby cards, posters, film stills, and celebrity portraits; more than 16,000 objects of photographic and cinematographic
technology; an internationally renowned research collection of books, periodicals, and other materials on photography and moving images; and George Eastman's home furnishings and decorative arts, personal and business correspondence, private library, photographs, negatives, films, and related personal items.
Photography collection The photography collection embraces numerous landmark processes, objects of great rarity, and monuments of art history that trace the evolution of the medium as a technology, as a means of scientific and historical documentation, and as one of the most potent and accessible means of personal expression of the modern era. More than 14,000 photographers are represented in the collection, including virtually all the major figures in the history of the medium. The collection includes original vintage works produced by nearly every process and printing medium employed. Notable holdings include: • One of the world's largest collection of daguerreotypes, including more than 1,000 by
Southworth & Hawes • A major collection of nineteenth-century photographs of the American West by photographers including
Carleton Watkins,
Eadweard Muybridge,
Timothy H. O'Sullivan, and
William Henry Jackson • A major collection of ca. 1890s–1910s glass negatives from French photojournalist
Charles Chusseau-Flaviens • The photographic estates of
Lewis Hine,
Edward Steichen,
Alvin Langdon Coburn,
Nickolas Muray and
Victor Keppler • A major collection of
Ansel Adams' early and vintage prints The museum's collection includes works by leading contemporary artists, including
Andy Warhol,
Candida Höfer,
David Levinthal,
Cindy Sherman,
Adam Fuss,
Vik Muniz,
Gillian Wearing,
Ori Gersht,
Mickalene Thomas, Chris McCaw, and Matthew Brandt.
Moving image collection The
George Eastman Museum Motion Picture Collection is one of the major moving image archives in the United States. It was established in 1949 by the first curator of film,
James Card (1915–2000) who helped to build the George Eastman Museum as a leading force in the field with holdings of over 25,000 titles and a collection of stills, posters and papers with over 3 million artifacts. The George Eastman Museum's collection includes the complete moving-image works of
William Kentridge.
George Eastman Legacy Collection This collection includes George Eastman's house and the George Eastman Archive and Study Center. Opened in April 1999, the George Eastman Archive and Study Center contains Eastman's personal possessions and documents pertaining to Kodak's early history. It has over half a million items a mounted elephant head, and an
Aeolian pipe organ.
Fire On May 30, 1978, a two-alarm fire affecting four buildings resulted in the loss of some rare movie films and still photographs in the collection, including the original negatives to the pre-1951 MGM cartoons, though not as bad as originally feared. ==George Eastman Awards==