2020 March – Documentation Strategies in (Archaeological) Open-Air Museums

Cattura 1What’s an open-air museum?
What is it for?
How can it be preserved?

Open-air museums are the faithful reconstruction of medieval villages.
Starting from the discovery of (pre)history archaeological sites and architectural sources, experts and professionals are able to recreate the environment of the houses starting from the same foundations and using the same techniques of construction and materials as in the origin.
Open-air museums don’t handle just the architectural aspect, but also the dwellings and the whole village comes back to life through the representation and staging of the ancient crafts and daily habits that characterized the evolution of the local people in the medieval period.
Cattura2EXARC is the International Association of Archaeological Open-Air Museums and Experimental Archaeology and since many years has been engaged in the reconstruction and maintenance of this cultural heritage.

Cattura3EXARC is an affiliated organization of ICOM, the International Council Of Museums.
It’s main goal is to transmit the knowledge of how life used to be in the past, of the traditions and crafts that characterize the evolution of a people in a specific historical period.
To tell this wonderful story, EXARC faithfully recreates the same environment by transporting the visitor hundreds of years back into time.
Using empirical, sensorial and visual methodologies,  these museums explain what the world was like before our times and what we can learn from the past.
According to EXARC, this wealth of knowledge risks to be lost.
First of all because it is required the application of digital technique of preservation in order to pass on and use this cultural heritage for future research and dissemination.
On this regard, we must be concerned that many open-air museums do not have  appropriate technical skills to perform this activity and are likely to disappear.
Secondly, the only way to preserve a specific type of knowledge is by teaching to future generations the art of ancient crafts and craftsmanship and this is something that it is not really assumed.
On the basis of these reflections, EXARC, in collaboration with Museumsdorf Düppel (DE), organized the international conference of next March and for this occasion launched a call for papers to trigger a debate about experiences and example of documentation in other open- air museums both on the (re) construction, up-keep and decay of houses as well as on craft activities.
The conference will take full days of 26 & 27 March, including an afternoon program and dinner on the 27th.
On Wednesday 25th  there will be an optional excursion to the Stadtmuseum Berlin.
Click here for the program and full information about the conference


Remarkable outcomes for the REACH International Workshop on Rural Heritage
2019-12-025The last 26th November, the University of Granada, task leader of the Rural Heritage Pilot of the REACH project, held a Workshop on“Participatory Approaches for Territorial Cohesion”.
Aim of the meeting was to investigate the value of participatory preservation of Cultural Heritage in terms of research advancement and social innovation.
Taking example by the experiences collected in the framework of the MEMOLA project  focused on the recovery of Traditional Agrosystems, the main topic of discussion was to pinpoint Best Practices for involving local communities in the care and preservation of the rural areas by instilling awareness of its cultural and environmental value and promoting responsible behaviours and civil engagement.
In this general contest, several International professionals presented their own experiences, sharing reflections and researches.
In summary the topics of the presentations of the speakers:
  • Jesús Fernández Fernández, from Ecomuseo La Ponte, introduced the concept of Ecomuseum and related case studies
  • Paola Nella Branduini, from the Politecnico of Milan, presented the thirty-year experience of the Ticino park.
  • Sergio Couto González from  ICCA Consortium and Iniciativas Comunales, left his contribute on “Re-thinking the commons: collective governance as heritage for facing global challenges.”
  • Manuela Martínez focused the presentation on the case study of La Vega and the action of preservation of the Granada’s Hystoric Agrarian Territory.
  • Carolina Yacamán Ochoa, from the Complutense University of Madrid, introduced the cases study of the agrarian parc of Fuenlabrada and the legislative proposal of protection of soils of high agroecological value and of soils of agricultural interest.
The synergy e dynamism of debate were intense and positive so that participant could take advantage of this meeting by understanding different perceptions of rural heritage and all the problematic for it conservation, preservation and sustainability.

To learn more about the workshop: https://www.reach-culture.eu/events/workshops/workshop-on-participatory-approaches-for-territorial-cohesion


OPFCON celebrating 10 years of the Open Preservation Foundation

opfcon2020 marks 10 years of the Open Preservation Foundation. To honour this occasion, we invite you to join us at a global celebration on 10 June at the Austrian National Library in Vienna. OPFCON is transformed into an online event.

OPFCON celebrates a decade of OPF, considers our impact on the community, and reflects on our role in the future of digital preservation.

Webpage: https://openpreservation.org/event/opfcon/

The theme of OPFCON is open sustainable digital preservation and we invite contributions that consider the following areas:

  • Knowledge sharing, policy and best practice
  • Innovation and technology
  • Sustainability through community collaboration


The technology and methodology behind WeAre#EuropeForCulture

WeAre#EuropeForCulture wanted people and citizens of any age and background to meet cultural heritage and interact with it, under the motto “it’s your history too”. It is a stubborn misunderstanding that communities or individuals who do not routinely engage with cultural activities have little or no interest in cultural values or do not value their heritage, as lack of interaction can have a myriad causes. Nowadays, digital applications play a more and more important role in helping cultural institutions come closer to citizens and audience via interactive approaches to culture. The role of Europeana, that is acknowledged as the “digital face” of the European Year of Cultural Heritage, is key in sharing millions of cultural heritage items that can be accessed by citizens, education networks and creative industry: a wealth of material to inspire new ways of conceiving cultural heritage creation, interaction and enjoyment.

But all this institutional material available online is only a part of the cultural heritage of people and places, which is not something that is exclusively kept in memory institutions, and it is not about objects and monuments only but it is also our traditions and way of living. Often, people underestimate the importance of the cultural heritage that is in their hands or in their family stories, but everybody preserves some precious items and old photos, which render such cultural riches.

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Basing on heritage photography, WeAre#EuropeForCulture leverages on a medium that is always very appreciated by all kinds of people. Photography, particularly the one depicting the stories and lives of our grandfathers, is something everybody easily relates to and interacts with. It really shows to the eye places, faces and situations that are common across generations and across countries, but it also captures traditions and peculiar stories from the local heritage that deserve to be re-discovered and shared.

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Combining heritage items and crowdsourced stories and photographs, WeAre#EuropeForCulture offered thousands of European citizens an opportunity to engage with both the History and their personal histories.

To enable all this, the exhibitions in 10 iconic cities in Europe were co-created and then displayed via a multiscreen technology that allowed both exhibition building and visitors interaction. Each exhibition was prepared well in advance during a series of co-creation sessions and workshops: during the preparatory phase and also at the co-creation workshops, different types of exhibitions formats were explored, customizing them to the requirement, needs and creative proposals of the participants. Photographic materials sourced from Museums and Europeana were mixed creatively with crowdsourced family photos and stories.

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The result is an easy-to-use, entertaining and modern way of interacting with cultural heritage and stories. The MuPop technology at the base of the WeAre#EuropeForCulture experience is a easy to access, interactive and highly engaging exhibition software that allows users to interact with content by simply connecting their own smartphone to the screen. As starting point of the experience, the exhibition runs in autoplay mode, to showcase the functionalities, simulating user input so that it draws maximum attention. Visitors can then  join in (and leave) at any time, with multiple users connected simultaneously.

3DE49BCC-EC3B-48BB-ABE7-24B5D128319EWeAre#EuropeForCulture leverages on this technology to be ‘where digital meets physical’, and as such the MuPop experience is more than just a digital screen that visitors can interact with. The idea is to lower the threshold for audiences to engage with cultural heritage, art and educational content, by making the content available in an accessible and playful way, within, but not necessarily in, a typical museum context, and making optimal use of the physical dimension of the spaces.

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PAST | PRESENT event of EYCH project WeAre#EuropeForCulture

WeAre#EuropeForCulture, financed in the framework of the European Year of Cultural Heritage, has the objective to realize a series of pop-up exhibitions across 2019 in various European cities, to celebrate the diversity of European cultural heritage and to empower citizens in a more participative approach to cultural heritage. The exhibitions are co-created joining institutional cultural heritage with crowdsourced stories and personal items.

Download the Booklet of WeAre#EuropeForCulture with photos and stories from the project’s events! PDF, 6 Mb.

As a common theme of these participatory exhibitions, the PAST | PRESENT event of the project celebrates the richness of this European cultural heritage, its value for our contemporary life, and the importance of best practices in the cultural heritage. The key concept is that the ‘past‘ is not just opposed to the ‘present‘ as in a simple chronological approach, but it is also experienced by and exposed to the audience in a contemporary context and shared as a ‘present’ to future generations.

 

PAST | PRESENT – 10 European cities, 10 heritage stories

On 6-7 February 2020, a sparkling event at the House of European History in Brussels celebrated the experiences of all these participatory exhibitions that took place throughtout Europe.

In the afternoon, the project coordinators Fred Truyen, Antonella Fresa and Sofie Taes were received by the European Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture and Education, Youth and Sport Ms. Mariya Gabriel who expressed kind words and congratulations for the active engagement in the WeAre#EuropeForCulture projects, “making sure that cultural heritage is accessible to all people”.

Afterwards, the exclusive invitation-only event started at the House of European History with speeches and interventions by Constanze Itzel, HEH Museum Director; Catherine Magnant, Head of Unit Cultural Policy, EC; Anne Grady, EC and of course with insight and stories of the project by the partners. The invited guests were then invited to visit the interactive installation especially realized for the event, bringing together images, recordings and interactions from the various locations which hosted and created the pop-up exhibitions.  A multiscreen setting allowed visitors to travel through and interact with the stories unfolded at the different events throughout Europe, showcasing a kaleidoscope of local history and the variety and commonalities of our cultural heritage.

A ceremony followed to celebrate the participants of the various local events, who came to Brussels from all over Europe.

On February 7th, the exhibition opened to the general public with guided tours.

Website: https://www.photoconsortium.net/europeforculture/

Agenda 6th February (PDF, 87 Kb)


Education, Youth, Culture and Sports European Council

These days, 21-22 November 2019, the European council is meeting in Brussels to discuss Education, Youth, Culture and Sports.

European Council

Culture was one of the main topic of yesterday meeting which aimed to improve the contribution of culture to the global challenge of sustainability by adopting a resolution to strengthen the contribution of culture to sustainable development.

With the goal of understanding the current situation of the European cultural, creative and audiovisual industries (ICCs) and assessing how they can operate and position themselves better on the global market, the ministers of culture held a public debate titled ‘Strengths, innovation potential and global competitiveness of the European cultural, creative and audiovisual industries’.

During the discussion Ministers identified the main challenges for the CCIs in the EU and the most important strengths of European CCIs:
– huge potential for growth
– ability to provide local content
– high quality of production
– linguistic and cultural diversity

The debate highlighed the need to create favourable conditions for the functioning of CCIs (legislative measures, facilitating funding, investing in digital skills and media literacy) and stressed the importance of cooperation at European level as a key for strengthening the competitiveness of European CCIs.

outcame European Council

 

 

At the end of the meeting the Council adopted a resolution on the cultural dimension of sustainable development that will start a process aimed to develop an action plan by the European Commission in cooperation with member states.

Read the outcome of the Council  meeting of 21 November  here.

 


RURITAGE and ROCK projects joint workshop

The workshop “Heritage-Led Regeneration: What Is Our Vision?” will take place in Brussels on Thursday 20 November, co-hosting by RURITAGE and ROCK projects.
This joint workshop will discuss the use of cultural heritage as a driver for sustainable growth in both urban and rural areas.
rock-ruritageIt will be part of the Playground events organized by the ILUCIDARE project with the aim of stimulating interdisciplinary interactions and networking among participants with discussions, inspirational speeches, workshops, panels and speed-networking.

Three working groups will explore different aspects of heritage-led regeneration:

  1. how heritage can contribute to building community resilience.
  2. what is the role of heritage in creating social inclusion, in particular access to cultural heritage for vulnerable groups.
  3. how heritage drives creativity, bringing together the concepts of creative cities and arts as an innovative force for rural regeneration.
The joint workshop will serve for drawing a European Vision Paper for urban and rural regeneration through cultural and natural heritage.

The RURITAGE project, with support of ROCK and other experts, will continue working on the Paper even after the workshop, and will share the final document in May 2020.

 


e-AGE 2019 registrations are open

asrenRegister Now and join us at our 9th International Conference e-AGE19 at Khalifa University (جامعة خليفة )  hosted by Ankabut 11-12 December 2019 in Abu Dhabi.

e-AGE19 theme is “Groundbreaking Research and Education Networks” and all activities will be centered on this. Special sessions will be dedicated to specific domains, mainly focusing on experiences in connectivity and e-Infrastructure, applications and services across a variety of scientific domains

Please visit http://asrenorg.net/eage19/


Sharing The GIFT box to all museums and cultural heritage professional

The GIFT Box is a set of free, open-source tools and ways of working to help museums offer richer digital experiences for their visitors. It includes resources to help design, plan and implement enhanced visitor experiences.

The GIFT Box provides:

  • Easy to use design and planning tools that help museums make richer visitor experiences.
  • Ready-made open-source digital tools that have been developed and tested in museums.
  • Practical recommendations on how to deal with digital design and change from 10 international museums.

gift box

The GIFT Box is a result of the GIFT project – a research project funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 research programme. The project brings together internationally renowned artists, designers, museum professionals and researchers to help museums create hybrid experiences: Experiences that combine the physical and digital to create personal encounters with cultural heritage. The project started in January 2017 and run for three years, to December 2019.

Discover! https://gifting.digital/the-gift-project/


Ashurst Emerging Artist Prize 2020 open for submissions

ashurstInternational law firm Ashurst and Oaktree & Tiger announce the launch of the sixth annual Ashurst Emerging Artist Prize, a major global prize for emerging artists.

The sixth year of the internationally successful Ashurst Emerging Artist Prize is open for entries! The prize is open to artists working across all genres, styles and backgrounds. The overall deadline is the 19 January 2020.

Open to artists anywhere in the world, entries are accepted in a wide range of media. The shortlist is to be announced in April 2020 and final winners announced in July 2020.

PRIZES INCLUDE:

– Value of Prizes increased to £10,000 prizes, for the Overall Winner, the Choice Award, the Sculpture Award, the New Media Award with partners Rich Mix and Photography Award with partners Genesis Imaging.

–  £1500 worth of services and a 12 month mentorship with Genesis Imaging

–  Includes £1,000 of vouchers from Cass Art for 3 Winners

–  Three month exhibitions in London, England

–  Group Show for 25 Shortlisted Artists in April – August 2020

Early entries will feature in our ongoing campaigns to clients, invitations to our informative talks. For further information and the application form see here http://www.artprize.co.uk/or please email mailto: info@artprize.co.uk with questions.

This year Melanie Lenz, curator at the V&A Museum, joins the panel as a judge. Melanie is the curator of Digital Art at the V&A. Based in London, she previously worked at the Barbican Art Gallery and Tate Modern and has over 15 years of experience of curating, commissioning and delivering creative projects. Josh McNorton, cultural director for Wembley Park, returns to judge for the second year of the new media award, as do independent art advisor Averil Curci and creative director of Genesis Imaging Mark Foxwell who will again judge the Photography Award. They join returning judges Dr David Anfam, senior consulting curator at the Clyfford Still Museum in Denver and author of the catalogue raisonné ‘Mark Rothko: The Works on Canvas’, Howard Lewis, director of the Schorr Collection, and Ashurst partner Anna Delgado. They are also joined by new guest judge Magnus Brooke, director of policy and regulatory affairs at ITV plc.

Full information about how to enter, including entry forms and rules, can be found online at www.artprize.co.uk.