5-7 November 2021: Living Digital Heritage Conference “Integrating the Past into the Present and Future”

This event will explore the applications of digital and virtual reality techniques for experiencing, preserving, and understanding ancient cultural heritage. It will cover a range of digital methods and their application to heritage-related pursuits, with specific focus on the domain of Virtual Heritage. It will bring together practitioners, researchers, educators and developers with a shared passion for the deployment and usage and continued exploitation of digital technologies for the benefit of the world heritage. The event will be the occasion to present experiences, storytelling, digital heritage projects and case studies promoting collaborations between civil society and Institutes of research.

The conference will be hold on line, the zoom links will be available a couple of days before the event.
The conference is organized and hosted by the Centre for Ancient Cultural Heritage and Environment (CACHE). of the University of Macquarie which promotes collaborative research into the cultural heritage and environmental knowledge of past peoples, including Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. In this light, the contributions that reflect the Indigenous Australian context are particularly welcomes by the conveners.
Download the draft programme here
Conference website
CACHE website


INCULTUM: promotion and enhancement of the village of San Pellegrino in Alpe (Tuscany)

photo courtesy of University of Pisa.

One of the Pilots of the INCULTUM project, aiming and empowering sustainable cultural tourism in peripheral areas with communities engagement, is coordinated by the University of Pisa and is set in the beautiful landscape of the Garfagnana in Tuscany.

On 17th July 2021, the INCULTUM inaugural event for the Pilot was held in Saint Pellegrino and Saint Bianco Sanctuary, organized by the Departments of Political Science of Pisa University, in collaboration with private and public local stakeholders: the Priest of San Pellegrino in Alpe, Fondazione Area, Fondazione Campus of Lucca, the Municipalities of Castiglione di Garfagnana and Frassinoro, the Provinces of Lucca and Modena.

The event also served to cast the first stone for the programme of touristic promotion implemented by the Pilot. The current scenario of development and enhancement of the mountain village of San Pellegrino in Alpe is expressed through the organization of multiple tourist and cultural promotional activities of  the area, which are aimed to different target users. In order to achieve the priority purpose of the project, which is the regeneration of an inland village with high unexpressed tourist potential, although rich in historical and natural attractions, the Pilot is developed on three lines of action:

  1. Educational activities aimed to middle and high schools students, in order to raise awareness of a sustainable use of local cultural and natural heritage. Specifically, there will be thematic guided tours inside the Ethnographic Museum that will highlight  historical peculiarities and ancient traditions of rural communities which inhabited the area.
  2. Training activities for local stakeholders, such as tour operators, tourism professionals and public bodies. The training courses will be carried out for providing useful skills and tools to implement inland areas and mountain village destination management strategies, in the framework of integrated, sustainable and responsible tourism increasing.
  3. Cultural and tourist activities aimed to visitors and residents. The realization of tourist trips is specifically characterized by immersive enjoyment tools for tourist experiences, both inside the Ethnographic Museum and outside. Theatrical narration activities are also oriented to the strengthening of local collective memory re-appropriation processes, in support of the historical and cultural identity of the territory. The calendar of events in 2022 is already annonced.

Finally, the rich natural heritage, which has always characterized the mountain village of San Pellegrino in Alpe, can be enjoyed through the creation of sustainable tourist itineraries, such as hiking trails and guided tours, which will be made available to different targets, on the occasion of the above mentioned activities carried out on site.

Web Site: https://santuariosanpellegrino.it/

Facebook: @santuariosanpellegrinoinalpe

Instagram: / santuariosanpellegrinoinalpe

 

Discover all the INCULTUM Pilots: https://incultum.eu/pilots/

 

 

 



The great potential of the online museum shop

by Emmy van Arent and Trilce Navarrete (Erasmus University Rotterdam).

Dollhouse replica of the Rembrandthuis (source: webshop.rembrandthuis.nl)

The COVID-19 pandemic forced museums to close their doors, limiting the dialogue with the public and severely reducing the revenue that is normally generated from ticket sales. Museums responded by providing online content and engaging in an unprecedented online dialogue. What alternative sources of revenue online emerged? A team from the Erasmus University Rotterdam is researching the response of Dutch museums by looking at their online shop, as a distinct cultural digital space reflecting museums’ values. We believe Dutch online museum shops have a lot of potential that is not always reached. We identified a number of small characteristics in product presentation with large implications in the way museums are recognized online.

The museum shop is not a necessary evil to replace the closed physical shop. It is a digital space with one main advantage: a larger (or even worldwide) reach. For many museums, the online shop is operated in an identical way to the physical shop, missing the advantages provided by the digital environment as well as the exploration of possible ways to attract other customers with different types of cultural capital. In turn, the online shop presents a few challenges of its own.

The potential of the museum shop and thus also the online museum shop is twofold: it can be used for a financial purpose as well as for an educational or mission-related goal. The online museum shop can serve as a tool that can convey the educational-, social-, environmental- and health-related mission that a museum stands for worldwide. This way,  visitors can take the museum experience home, anywhere in the globe.

fig. 1 Educational value of the products

 

As mentioned before, there are a number of small characteristics in product presentation with large implications in the way museums are recognized online. These characteristics must be optimized to reach the online museum shops full potential. The first characteristic in product presentation is the presence of an educational value. In our research, where we took a diverse sample of 673 museum products sold in Dutch online museum shops, we saw that 69% of the products do not convey a direct educational value (see Figure 1). When analysing the products, we looked at the text provided in the product description and adjudicated an educational value considering the perspective of a shopper that has not seen the museum exhibition beforehand and therefore has no prior knowledge on the product. Providing products with an educational narrative would radically increase the perceived educational value of products for a wider audience, with various levels of capital. Most museum products have this narrative inherently by virtue of being part of a museum collection but this is not communicated via the shop. Museums could easily change the product’s narrative to improve this characteristic and to enhance their educational role.

A second characteristic identified is the specific environmental, health and social values that are conveyed through the products in the shop. We found that the product category Apparel scores relatively high on the various values. Products of this category often have a narrative describing environmentally friendly materials, include face masks in response to the current health concern, redistribute revenue fairly among the makers or forward profits to a specific charity to communicate social value. Few products communicated these values. We expect museums wanting to reach a younger engaged audience, with interest to voice their perspective on environmental, health, or social values, will consider such narratives along the products in their online shop. As in the previous case, adding a specific narrative to reflect the institutional values on products can be relatively easy.

In the third part of our research, we looked at how the products were displayed. In the physical shop, a customer can touch a product and see all its details while online museum shops rely on images and the overall presentation of the product collection to convey quality information for the consumer.

fig. 2 Number of images

We saw that most products are shown with only one picture (see Figure 2) while a handful of online museum shops displayed the products from multiple views and in use. The way the product is presented, in this case using various images, have an important effect on the perception of quality, as well as the values of the institution. We believe the quality of images to represent the product is worth considering. Museums have much knowledge in the digitization of their collections, it is to be expected that products in the museum online shop can also benefit from the basic sense of best practice regarding image representation.

In short, we argue that any individual in the world can benefit from ‘taking the museum home’ by making a purchase from the museum online shop, extending the educational value of the museum while providing additional revenue. It is only logical to expect museums to develop their shops after the pandemic. We strongly advise enriching the narrative and taking full care to curate the shop, with the same attention for the educational value of the museum as any other service provided. Future research lines can follow by looking into the actual sales by product characteristics and display, as well as consumer perception of the educational narratives provided.

 

 

 


WEAVE collaborates with INCULTUM

Local communites are fundamental for engagement with their heritage and territorial resources: this is a key aspect that project INCULTUM, focused on sustainable tourism, wants to explore so to unlock the potential of development of rural and peripheral areas in Europe. This H2020 project is a large research action also including 10 pilots in different countries that explore the role of local communities to support territorial promotion.

The importance of local communities in the management of their own heritage is one of the main topics of WEAVE and particularly of the LabDays, hence a collaboration was recently established with INCULTUM, in the light of leveraging a common ground for mutual support and cross dissemination of projects’ outcomes.

Website: https://incultum.eu/


Interactive map of the Aoos valley developed in INCULTUM

In INCULTUM project, there is an example of cross-borders pilots which try to explore synergies to support sustainable tourism in peripheral areas. One of these areas is the shared valley between Greece and Albania, marked by a river named Aoos on the Greek side and Vjosa on the Albanian side. Two pilots (7 and 8) are developed within INCULTUM project with the aim of modernizing the touristic and cultural promotion of this area from both sides.

A first outcome of the Pilot 7. Aoos, the shared river, coordinated by the Greek partners of The High Mountains cooperative, is a nice map of the area with touristic purposes, indicating various points of interest both natural and cultural and also including local folklore.

EXPLORE THE MAP HERE


More about the Aoos Pilot:

The Vjosa/Aoos River, considered as ‘one of Europe’s last living wild rivers’, springs from Mt. Pindus in Greece, and then enters Albania. On both sides of the river banks, extends a terrain of agrarian field terraces alternated with hilly lands of rich Mediterranean vegetation where the traditional settlements are situated, followed by high mountain massifs dominated by continental climate with rich water sources, forests, flora and fauna, and broad prominent pastures.

On the Greek side, Konitsa is the main town of the area and the capital of the municipality surrounded by some of the highest mountains of Greece. It is built on the edge of Vikos Canyon, core of the National Park of Vikos-Aoos and one of the four Greek Geoparks, which became a member of the European and Global Geopark Networks in 2010. Numerous geosites within the territory are situated in landscapes of incomparable beauty.

In the INCULTUM pilot 7, the main expected action relates to the mapping of the natural, social, cultural and productive resources of the area, analysis of the data gathered during the mapping and their visualization using Business Intelligence tools. With this digital platform we are going to give the ability to citizens, local authorities and stakeholders, but also to visitors, to virtually combine resources of the area and propose their own evidence-based development actions and policies. Furthermore, the database is going to be participatory and always open to new inputs, collected by questionnaires, free text, business registrations, comments for the area etc.

Discover all the INCULTUM Pilots: https://incultum.eu/pilots/

 

 

 



WEAVE presented at Europeana Generic Services projects meeting

This invite-only event brings together representatives of all running and new Generic Services projects, the funding agency European Health and Digital Executive Agency – HaDEA, and the European Commission.

WEAVE project was presented on day 1 the 11th October with a nice video from the coordinator Alex Stan (IN-2) and a short Q&A with the participants.

 

Generic Services (GS) projects are funded by the European Commission under the CEF Telecom programme.These projects support cultural heritage institutions in their digital transformation as well as contribute to further development of the Europeana Core Service Platform. Participants of the meeting aim to find synergies, resolve common issues and align with the current and strategic developments around the Europeana Core Service Platform.

Date: 11-12 October 2021

Time: 13:00-17:00 CEST

View the programme here

 

 


 


Citizen science for cultural heritage: ECSA webinar
  • What kind of citizen science initiatives take place in the cultural heritage field?
  • How cultural heritage contributes to citizen science and civic engagement in general?
  • What lessons can be drawn for the relevance of social sciences and humanities to citizen science?

On October 26 (16h-17h CET), it is organized a webinar “From mainstream citizen science to new conceptualizations: insights from the cultural heritage sector” to discuss these topics.

The event belongs to a series of webinars of the European Citizen Science Association (ECSA) and its Working Group “Citizen science and universities”.

It is co-corganised by the team of the Erasmus+ KA2 project CitizenHeritage: Citizen Science Practices in Cultural Heritage: towards a Sustainable Model in Higher Education and the discussion will unfold through a nexus of three presentations,all downloadable as PDF:

  • Fred Truyen, KU Leuven.  “CitizenHeritage: giving citizens a voice in Heritage studies” – PDF
  • Katerina Zourou, Web2Learn. “Review of practices of Higher Education engagement in citizen enhanced open science in the area of cultural heritage” – PDF
  • Trilce Navarrete, Erasmus University Rotterdam. “Measuring the benefits of civic participation in academic research” – PDF

 

 

 

 

 


CitizenHeritage presented at the Museum of Natural History in Berlin

CitizenHeritage will be presented at the online symposium Participatory Transcription Projects in Museums, Archives, Libraries – A Practical Exchange of Experience, by project partners Katerina Zourou and Mariana Ziku  (Web2Learn).The event is organized by the Museum of natural History in Berlin.The topic of the CitizenHeritage talk is Transcribathons as citizen science projects: a comparative analysis of European initiatives, derived from the massive work done in the Citizen Heritage project for an inventory of participatory approaches in Cultural Heritage.The slides of the talk are available on Slideshare here.


About the symposium

In recent years, the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin has initiated various digital and analog projects in which, with the help of participatory approaches, written materials and the like have been transcribed.With the help of participatory approaches, written material and similar materials from the Historical Research Unit and the museum’s collection have been transcribed and made accessible.This workshop aims at entering into an open exchange with participatory projects of other museums, archives and libraries in the German-speaking countries and Europe, and to discuss the strategic set-up, implementation and further development of such projects.More about the symposium: https://www.museumfuernaturkunde.berlin/en/museum/events/participatory-transcription-projects-museums-archives-libraries-a-practical-exchange


CHARTER Alliance publishes its first result and presents a new model for the cultural heritage sector

The European Cultural Heritage Skills Alliance CHARTER, Erasmus+ funded project, released its first public deliverable: “A new landscape for heritage professions preliminary findings” by Working Package 2 (Strategic analysis of cultural heritage competences and occupational profiles). The report summarises the work and preliminary findings that the WP2 has developed over the past six months.
The report presents the development of a new integrated model for the cultural heritage sector, defining its breadth, dynamics and boundaries in relation to existing cultural, statistical, occupational and economic conceptual definitions, policy principles and frameworks. The model reflects the evolving discourse about cultural heritage and is aligned with the concept of cultural heritage as a “shared resource and common good”, which impacts human, economic and social wellbeing.
The model conveys holistic principles while being applicable in economic and social assessments and policies, proposing cultural heritage as a discrete domain on its own, with specific functions for its full realization.
The report is the result of desk research on the contemporary discourse in cultural heritage, as evidenced in recent policy documents, reports and latest conceptual frameworks, assessment of current statistical indicators and brainstorming sessions with the CHARTER consortium for contributions and validation of the ongoing results.
Access the Full report in the Results section of CHARTER’s website.
• Learn more about CHARTER Alliance: https://charter-alliance.eu/
• Subscribe to the newsletter: http://bit.ly/CHARTER-newsletter


Podcast released: YCC Episode with Miguel Angel Vargas

WEAVE project is organizing a series of LabDays to engage communities with their tangible and intangible heritage and present novel ways of cultural heritage representation in the digital realm. The ERIAC LabDay scheduled for Monday October 11th will have a number of key Roma artists and figures. Among them is Spanish Roma Miguel Angel Vargas who recently sat down with Rosa Cisneros from Coventry University for the Yellow Couch Convos Podcast series.  They had a candid conversation on Flamenco and navigating the various roles of being an artist, civil servant, and social activist.

 

BIO: Miguel Ángel Vargas is a Spanish artist with distinctive Andalusian-Gitano roots stemming from Lebrija and Jerez. He earned his degree in Art History from the University of Seville. He also studied Theatre Direction at the Seville Institute of Theatre in 1999. He collaborates with several academic universities across Spain and abroad also sits supports several of ERIAC initiatives.

He participated in many shows as an actor, musician, director, producer and technician. He defines himself as a poet because he tries to embody the authentic meaning from which the original Greek (ποιητής) was derived: the one who creates, the one who begets and gives birth. His passion resides in the world of flamenco and theatre. His heartfelt mission is to tell the stories of the Gitano fieldworkers from Lebrija and to follow the commitment of the Teatro Lebrijano, an independent political theatre company established in his hometown in the 1970s. His work portfolio is extensive and vibrant. He has worked with many different artists and companies in a variety of roles.