Education
The basis of the Film Museum's education policy has always been the "screened presence" of film: the cinema event. The cinema is the most suitable place for encountering the medium of film, it is the unique crossroads between a historical technology, an aesthetic setting and a social situation. The Film Museum has received much recognition for this work, both at home and abroad; the claim it stakes for a museologically appropriate mode of presenting film continues to be a highly regarded aspect of its education work. The radical (in the sense of "going to the roots") approach of the Museum's co-founders, Peter Kubelka and Peter Konlechner, was a novelty in 1960s Austria. They declared film to be a "museum object", thus introducing it into high culture, while keeping in mind the primary role of the sensual film experience (emphasizing independent and avant-garde positions in the process).
The Film Museum has been considered a "School of Seeing" (Die Zeit) ever since its inception in 1964. This school does not commence when one becomes an adult or enters university. The aim of the Austrian Film Museum's film education policy is to start giving impulses long before that, focussing on a critical and playful examination of moving images - both from the past and the present. As Umberto Eco says, "A democratic civilization will save itself only if it makes the language of the image into a stimulus for critical reflection, not an invitation to hypnosis."
Since 1975, several discussions with filmmakers have been recorded, since 2004 almost all educational events (lectures, symposia, debates, Q & As) are being documented on audio or video. The Film Museum's video collection enables researchers to view these documents in the library space.




