
Photo by Margaret Sheble
Title: A.R.T. Games Night
Date & Time: Saturday, March 21st, 2026, at 5:30PM
Duration: 2 hours
Capacity: 30
Admission: Free! (Open to A.R.T. Members & Non-Members).
Location: Interference Archive (314 7th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215)
Get ready for an evening of play, connection, and a little friendly competition! Archivists Round Table is hosting a Games Night at Interference Archive. Bring your favorite game of any kind (board games, card games, tile games, etc.), and we'll have some on deck as well. All experience levels are encouraged to join -- now is the best time to learn a new game or share one of your favorites. Snacks will be provided, guests are welcome (NOT required)!
We’ll also set aside time to brainstorm how games can come to life in your own institution -- while highlighting and sharing examples of library- and archive-centered games that already exist.
Interference Archive is open to the public from 12-5PM, so feel free to come early and explore their collections before the games begin at 5:30PM.
This is an in-person event limited to 30 attendees. Registration is non-transferable. Please note that you MUST reserve a ticket in advance online in order to attend this event.
In the occasion that the event is sold out, we highly recommend joining the waitlist. An ART staff member will reach out to you if a spot becomes available. Unless you've been given permission, please do not show up at the event without registering.
How to find Interference Archive
Interference Archive is located in Park Slope, Brooklyn, on 7th Street between 4th and 5th Avenues. The nearest subway lines are the F, G, and R lines at 4th Avenue/9th Street, and the B65 bus stops along 5th Avenue. Please visit Interference Archive’s website for more details about visiting the archive, including accessibility information and public health visitor requirements.
About
The mission of Interference Archive is to explore the relationship between cultural production and social movements. This work manifests in an open stacks archival collection, publications, a study center, and public programs including exhibitions, workshops, talks, and screenings, all of which encourage critical and creative engagement with the rich history of social movements. The archive contains many kinds of objects that are created as part of social movements by the participants themselves: posters, flyers, publications, zines, books, T-shirts and buttons, moving images, audio recordings, subject files, and other materials. For more information about Interference and how to get involved, please visit their website.
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Please note that by registering and attending this event/webinar, you automatically grant your consent to be photographed and/ or video-recorded and to the release, publication, or reproduction of any and all recorded media of your appearance, voice, and name for any purpose whatsoever in perpetuity in connection with the Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York, Inc. and its initiatives, including, by way of example only, use on websites, in social media, news, newsletters, Metropolitan Archivist, and advertising.