Wildscreen

Wildscreen
Founded December 1987 (1987-12)
Founder
Type registered charity
Registration no. 299450
Location
Area served
Global
Key people
Lucie Muir (Director)
Employees
4
Mission "to convene the best photographers, filmmakers and creative professionals with the most committed conservationists to create compelling stories about the natural world; that inspire the wider public to experience it, feel part of it and protect it."[1]
Website www.wildscreen.org

Wildscreen is a wildlife conservation charity[1] based in Bristol, England.

The charity was founded in December 1987[2] from a trust which had operated since 1982.[2] The founders included Sir Peter Scott[1] and Christopher Parsons OBE, former Head of the BBC Natural History Unit,[1] with the initial aim of encouraging and applauding excellence in the production of natural history films and television.

Wildscreen Film Festival

Wildscreen Festival
Location Bristol, England
Founded 1982 (1982)
Awards Wildscreen Panda Awards
Hosted by Wildscreen
Website http://wildscreen.org/festival

The Wildscreen Festival is the world’s leading international festival about nature films. It is held biennially in October in Bristol, England.

The festival began in 1982. In 1994, it merged with a biennial wildlife symposium, previously held in the neighbouring city of Bath. At Wildscreen Festival wildlife filmmakers and broadcasters from different parts of the world met to view the latest productions, discuss issues of mutual interest, exchange ideas and compete for the Panda Awards.[3]

Over the years since then the festival has significantly expanded its scale and content and the charity has also enlarged its remit, including by launching Arkive, a centralised collection of films and photographs of endangered species.[4]

Other Initiatives

A physical collection of images, footage and information was started, which went online in 2003. This resource has grown to include over 16,000 species profiles and 100,000 images and videos from over 7,500 of the world’s filmmakers, photographers and scientists. Arkive also contains topic pages that focus on various conservation issues, geographical regions and biological subjects. Arkive is used by over a million people around the world each month.[5]

In May 2015 Wildscreen launched their newest initiative, Wildscreen Exchange. This conservation initiative provides conservation organisations with access to images, videos and expertise. Wildscreen Exchange contains over 28,000 images and many hours of video that are being used all over the world for campaigns, education resources, community outreach, fundraising and online..[1]

Management

Wildscreen is a registered charity under English law,[6] governed by a board of 17 independent trustees,[1] chaired by Dick Emery OBE, former CEO of UKTV.[1]

The chief executive is Richard Edwards, appointed in March 2011 to succeed Harriet Nimmo, who stepped down in January that year after 13 years with the charity, seven in the CEO role.[7] Despite moving to South Africa, Nimmo retains a connection with the charity, in the advisory role of Wildscreen Strategic Director.[7]

For the period April 2009 – March 2010 (which was a non-festival year for the biennial Wildscreen Festival), the charity's income was declared as £1,409,722, with expenditure of £1,417,362.[1]

Wildscreen is a founder member of the Bristol Natural History Consortium, set up in 2004.[2]

Patrons

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 WildScreen Annual Review 2010 (PDF). Wildscreen. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 "Wildscreen – About". Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  3. Slade, Caroline (14 October 2012). "Wildscreen Festival, preview". Telegraph. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
  4. "Wildscreen/ARKive, UK". Sterna. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
  5. "Wildscreen conservation charity uses colocation to preserve endangered species media library". Computer Weekly. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  6. Charity Commission. Wildscreen, registered charity no. 299450.
  7. 1 2 "Wildscreen – News – Press releases". Wildscreen. 7 March 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
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