Music and broadcasting executive Meagan Loader will join the National Film and Sound Archive as its Chief Curator.
At the NFSA, Loader will lead a team of curators in the ongoing development of the national audiovisual collection. Based in the NFSA’s Sydney office, she will direct the NFSA’s collecting activities and advance the institution’s strategy for collection interpretation, programming and research. She will join the NFSA Executive and report to its CEO Patrick McIntyre.
Loader’s extensive broadcasting experience includes more than a decade at the ABC, where she worked in roles encompassing editorial leadership and content strategy, and talent management and development. Her most recent role was Head of Music & Young Audiences in which she oversaw digital, radio, podcast and TV content across networks including triple j, Double J, rage, ABC Classic, ABC Country, and ABC Jazz. She developed the ABC’s first On-Air Talent Strategy and launched its Digital Talent Fund. Loader was also the founding Station Director of independent youth broadcaster FBI Radio when the network launched in 2003.
Australia’s audiovisual archive includes podcasts, virtual reality, web and social content alongside recorded music, television, cinema, news and current affairs, home movies, sporting, scientific and artistic recordings across a range of formats, and physical artefacts such as costumes, posters and ephemera. Items in the collection date from the 1890s to materials created last week.
‘Replacing outgoing Chief Curator Gayle Lake, who retires in June, was always going to be a tall order. We couldn’t be more delighted that Meagan has chosen to join the NFSA team,’ said Patrick McIntyre. ‘Her extensive career in executive leadership, program direction and content creation in cross-platform audiovisual environments makes her exceptionally suited to the role. I’m really excited to work with Meagan as the institution continues to adapt to the ever-evolving changes in audiovisual production and consumption driven by digital innovation, while maintaining our long-established strengths in analogue and physical preservation.’
‘Joining the talented, passionate team of curators, hunters and collectors at the NFSA is such a privilege. Contributing to the world-leading work being done to preserve, digitise and make accessible the stories, ideas and always evolving expressions of Australian identity is a great honour and I can't wait to get in there,’ said Meagan Loader. ‘The NFSA is a truly dynamic cultural leader, and the opportunity to bring my passion for Australian audiences, community-building, culture, music, podcasts, radio, gaming, video, film and TV together in the role of Chief Curator is beyond exciting.’
Loader will start at the NFSA on 14 May 2024.
Image available here
Media enquiries: Louise Alley | Communications Manager | 0422 348 652 | louise.alley@nfsa.gov.au
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.