Dear reader,

Welcome to our quarterly newsletter! Here you can read about the recent news and developments of the International Heritage Cooperation programme of the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE).

Do you have any questions or suggestions? Please let us know.

Happy readings!
 
 
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Second expert meeting Albany exchange Neerbosch | a x n 2022

Livestream 30 June 2022, 15.00 hrs (CET) or 9.00 hrs (EST)

On 30 June, the second expert meeting within the Albany exchange Neerbosch | a x n 2022-project will take place. Everyone is invited to join this broadcast to learn about the insights experts from the USA and the Netherlands have gained during this second round of workshops about development potentials of two comparable heritage sites: Van Ostrande-Radliff House (also called 48 Hudson) in Albany, New York and Kinderdorp Neerbosch in Nijmegen. In June, the participants will discuss possibilities of adaptive re-use of both sites.

Albany exchange Neerbosch | a x n 2022
In February 2022, the Historic Albany Foundation (HAF), Van ’t Lindenhout Museum Neerbosch-Nijmegen, and the RCE jointly initiated an international online expert exchange titled ‘Albany exchange Neerbosch | a x n 2022’. The three-part exchange explores development potentials of the Van Ostrande-Radliff and Kinderdorp Neerbosch. Each part of this exchange examines the cases from different angles: area development, adaptive re-use and restoration practices. Taking two heritage sites situated in different contexts, the programme discusses the shared challenges they face and ways to address them.
Link to programme 30 June
 
Participants of the previous edition of Sharing Stories on Contested Histories
Participants of the 2019 edition of Sharing Stories on Contested Histories ©Lina van den Idsert

Call for applicants: training Sharing Stories on Contested Histories

This November, the fourth edition of the training Sharing Stories on Contested Histories will bring together 24 young museum and heritage professionals and academics. Together, they will explore and discuss how museums deal with the presence of multiple and sometimes opposing views on their collections and displays; how they enable communities who may have different readings of the same historical events to share their stories with audiences; and how museums can respond to political and cultural concerns to mobilise social change.

This is a unique, international training programme for upcoming museum and heritage professionals and academics who are concerned with how they can ethically engage with complex heritage to shape more equitable futures. The training approaches shared challenges in the field of cultural heritage by bringing together professionals from 24 countries to exchange perspectives and approaches and develop new knowledge and practices together. 

Be part of this training and meet other young professionals! The deadline for applications is extended to 15 July. The training will take place online from 13 – 25 November, and is jointly organised by the RCE and the Reinwardt Academy in the framework of the International Heritage Cooperation programme.
About the training
 
Centre of Amsterdam RCE
City centre of Amsterdam © RCE

Ten years of Historic Urban Landscape

In 2021, UNESCO celebrated the 10 years anniversary of the so called Recommendation on the Historic Urban Landscape (HUL). During the extended event, which took place between June and December, the current and future applications of the HUL-approach were discussed in several online meetings. The event was supported by the Netherlands in order to define the HUL’s usefulness on the topic of water challenges and heritage conservation, as a means to support the Climate Adaptation Summit of 2021. For that reason, Delft University of Technology was assigned to provide a global overview on the topic. The assignment was executed in joint collaboration with the Ministry’s World Heritage Programme and the International Heritage Cooperation Programme. The video that was produced as output, can be viewed on Youtube.
Watch the video
 
Cover of the publication with a building near a pond and a grass field
Cover of publication Marcel Andrzejczak

Research into historical connection Vistula Delta and the Netherlands published

Żuławy Wislane in the Vistula Delta in northern Poland is a region unlike any other in the country; this unique landscape, with its extensive network of canals, dikes and other elements of water infrastructure, was initially created by Dutch Mennonites that migrated to this region in the 16th century for its religious freedom. Marcel Andrzejczak researched the historical connection between the Vistula Delta landscape and the Netherlands as well as the unique hydrotechnical heritage that exists there today which is to a great extent a result of this connection. What is the current state of this landscape and what is its potential for the future?

This report presents the results of Marcel’s study during his 5-month long internship at the RCE in 2021.
Download this publication
 
Delegation in front of building
Visit of the delegation to La Fondation Nationale des Musees in Rabat © DutchCulture

Cooperation between Morocco and the Netherlands

At the beginning of April, DutchCulture organised the first inception mission to Morocco. The Moroccan partner, the Fondation Nationale de Musées du Maroc, aims to modernise the museum world in Morocco according to the applicable international standards, and to create museums that present the "Moroccan heritage to the Moroccan people and the world". Representatives of DutchCulture, the Reinwardt Academy, the Dutch embassy in Rabat, and our colleague Yolanda Ezendam visited various museums and met with museum professionals to identify the needs for exchange and capacity-building projects. Representatives of the Fondation Nationale des Musées then came to the Netherlands as part of a DutchCulture visitors' programme, where they visited various Dutch museums and institutions.

As a result of these two visits, a plan is being drawn up for a training and exchange week for Moroccan museum professionals in Amsterdam and Rabat in December and for collaboration after this pilot year.
Read more
 
Various sculptures in a storage room
Part of the MANN’s collection storage in the attic of the main building © J.P. Corten

The Museum and the City

On 21 and 22 April, the RCE and Delft University of Technology conducted a workshop at the famous Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli (MANN). Subject of the workshop was the museum’s amazing archaeological collection. Currently, the museum is exploring the options for improving storage conditions of the immense collection. And in doing so, it wants to explore the potentials for reaching out to the precinct surrounding the museum. Since the monumental Galleria Principe (located right opposite the museum) is standing idle, this might offer opportunities for exposure of the collection.

The explorative workshop was conducted at the request of the MANN and was attended by its staff, as well as by local experts and by representatives of the Italian Ministry of Culture and the Municipality of Naples. The workshop aimed at defining the current needs and potentials of the collection. Furthermore, the workshop was meant to explore possible future collaboration between the Italian and Dutch parties.

Although the results of the workshop are still being discussed, TU Delft seems to be in a favourable position to further collaborate on the museum’s challenges. Whether the RCE will be involved will depend on the extent to which the challenges addressed are topical for the Netherlands.
 
 
Harbour of Alexandria Photo Flo
Harbour of Alexandria Photo Flo

UHS training on port cities

The Urban Heritage Strategies (UHS) training on the port cities of Casablanca, Alexandria, Istanbul and Amsterdam is in full swing. Professionals from the various cities exchange their perspectives on water challenges faced by these cities. In August, they will meet again for the second exchange. In our next newsletter, we will reflect on this UHS training and the perspectives gained by the participants.

The course is organized by the Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS, Erasmus University Rotterdam) in close cooperation wit the Department of Architectural Engineering of Delft University of Technology and the RCE.
 

Information

This is the newsletter of the International Heritage Cooperation programme of the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands. Our programme follows from the International Cultural Policy Framework 2021-2024 of the Dutch government. Other organisations executing the national International Heritage Cooperation programme are DutchCulture, the National Archives of the Netherlands, KIEN and the Embassies of the Netherlands in the partner countries. For more information on their activities, see their respective websites.
 
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