Dear reader,

Welcome to our quarterly newsletter! Read about recent news and developments of the International Heritage Cooperation programme of the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed | RCE).

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

Happy readings!
 
 

Updates on current collaborations

 
 
Kyivs inner city
Kyiv’s inner-city 2024 (photo: Unsplash)/free of rights

Urban Heritage Strategies in times of conflict

Application deadline IHS: April 29th 2024

This year’s edition of the Course on Urban Heritage Strategies is tailored to crisis situations. How to deal with the historic urban core when your city is under siege? How to prevent loss and how to prepare for rehabilitation? How to organize required maintenance and how to withstand development pressure? Urban professionals working in crisis situations, especially from Ukraine, are invited to apply. Professionals from the Netherlands and other countries are also welcome to join this course.

The course is split into two parts. Part one, focusing on theories and concepts is offered online. Part two, focusing on practical skills and networking, is conducted at Erasmus University Rotterdam.

This course is a joint endeavor of the RCE with Erasmus University of Rotterdam and Delft University of Technology.
Read more about the UHS course
 
Group photo
An online group photo with all the participants of the workshop. © RCE

Workhop South Africa - Sri Lanka - the Netherlands

The RCE organized a knowledge exchange between South Africa, Sri Lanka and the Netherlands in order to explore the possibilities of generic solutions for global challenges and to build an international network of experts. These three countries might be geographically far apart, however, the challenges they face regarding conservation efforts are similar. Laying three case studies side by side they investigated the primary reason for conservation within each dimension (cultural, environmental, social, and economic).
 
Course Sharing Stories
Participants at the Iziko South African National Gallery. ©Reinwardt Academie / Ruben Smit

Case study: Reflection on Sharing Stories on Contested Histories 2024

You’re young, you work in a museum and you’re surrounded by objects with a traumatic past – objects with ties to slavery, for instance. How do you tell visitors about these harrowing histories? How do you deal with cultural heritage that pours salt into wounds that haven’t closed yet? Last November, 24 young museum and heritage professionals from around the world gathered for a week-long knowledge exchange about some of the more painful aspects of cultural heritage. Many insights were shared and discussed.
Read more about the workshop
 
Read the full case study
   
Estherrust, Suriname
Students from Leiden University and Anton de Kom University investigating the remains of buildings at Plantation Esthersrust. Photo: M. Manders, © RCE

Field research: Esthersrust in Suriname

Between the 7th and the 26th of January 2024 three students from the faculty of Archaeology at Leiden University (Netherlands) and their professor Martijn Manders went to Suriname for fieldwork at Esthersrust, a former cotton and coffee plantation. Esthersrust is situated on the Atlantic Sea coast and was already in use in the early 1800s. The Dutch team joined (former) students from Anton de Kom University in Suriname and together they monitored the site that is being washed away by the ocean, due to coastal erosion related to climate change.

In this blogpost you will read this experience through the eyes of one of the students from Leiden University. How did their day look like and what is it like to experience fieldwork in another country as a young researcher?
Read the full blog
 

Knowledge exchange and establishing networks

 
 
West-Indisch Huis, a national heritage site
West-Indisch Huis, a national heritage site. Gerard J. Dukker, BY-SA 3.0 © RCE

Monumental Matters: a reflection

In November, the RCE and the ErfgoedAcademie organized two webinars on multivocality in relation to national monuments and built heritage. Two important questions guided the sessions: How do our (choices of) National Monuments or National Heritage reflect society? And how can we accommodate multiple voices and histories within National Monument lists? These questions were tackled by international experts in a series of presentations, offering inspiration for discussions between approximately 90 participants in attendance from more than 10 countries. Masja Bentzen Wischmann, Lorna Cruickshanks and Sofia Lovegrove wrote a short article reflecting on the main discussion points and insights that came up in these sessions. The article includes also the recordings of both online sessions.
Read the full article
 
Hoender Pasar Drawbridge Jakarta
Hoender Pasar Drawbridge as reconstructed in 1937. Temminck Groll, © RCE (nr TG72-14-008)

Hoender Pasar Drawbridge, Jakarta

Jakarta’s Hoender Pasar Bridge once gave access to the city’s famous chicken market. The bridge dates from the 17th century and was located close to the then Castle of Batavia, overlooking the Kali Besar canal. Constructed under VOC-rule, it was executed as drawbridge, a quite famous piece of Dutch engineering. Today it is one of the few remaining drawbridges in the country. Now that local authorities have decided to reconstruct the currently dilapidated structure, the Indonesian Architectural Centre (PDA) consulted the RCE on the history and technology of this type of bridge. For the occasion our former colleague and member of the Dutch Bridges Association, Gert Jan Luijendijk, has been able to provide the Indonesian counterparts with the requested information. The bridge is supposed to be reconstructed later this year.
   

Other news

 
 
A market in Labuhan Deli where several things are being sold like food and clothes.
Shophouses in Labuhan Deli. Peter Timmer © RCE

Labuhan Deli: A flourishing future (workshop)

In Medan, many Dutch-era colonial buildings are currently being restored. Less well known is that the origins of this Indonesian metropolis lie in the small town of Labuhan Deli. Today, it is a somewhat forgotten area in the city’s northern reaches. The Sumatra Heritage Trust organised a workshop focused on preserving Labuhan’s heritage and revitalising the area, the RCE took part in this workshop.
 
Cover of the brochure Filling Losses in Paint
Cover of the brochure Filling Losses in Paint. © RCE

Filling Losses in Paint | Paintings Conservation (brochure)

Are you a conservator of easel paintings and do you want to keep up with current knowledge and/or learning how to apply new techniques? Within this brochure you will find information about the different types of losses found in ground and paint layers on different substrates, historical approaches to and materials for filling, methods for removing old fillings that are no longer suitable, modern types of fills and recipes, and some techniques for fillings and applying texture to fillings.
Read more about the workshop
 
Go to the brochure
   
Colonial Collections webinarPS
© Wereldmuseum

Colonial Collections in the Netherlands (webinar)

Date: 21st of March 2024

The colonial past has left traces in the collections of Dutch museums and other institutions. Because of the imbalance of power, many objects were removed from their countries of origin and brought to the Netherlands. Through this, these objects were lost to their communities. The current Dutch policy on colonial collections aims to help rectify this historic injustice by facilitating requests for restitution of cultural heritage objects from countries of origin, by working towards openness and transparency about collections in the Netherlands and by strengthening international collaboration on these collections.
 
Architectural Finishes Research Conference
AFRC logo © RCE

Architectural Finishes Research Conference

A hybride event in Amsterdam and online

From 29/05 to 01/06 specialists in the field of Architectural Finishes Research (AFR) will come together at this international event. During four-days they can meet and exchange ideas and new developments in the interpretation, preservation, documentation, education and management of historical architectural finishes: from paint to other colourful finishing materials. The programme alternates between lectures, social events and excursions in small groups, and promises to be ideal for nurturing a more professional and cohesive global Architectural Paint and Finishes Research community.
More information about the webinar
 
More information and registration
   

Information

The International Heritage Cooperation programme of the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands 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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