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!
 
 
Michaela Hanssen Paul Tolenaar
Michaëla Hanssen © Paul Tolenaar

Introducing Michaëla Hanssen, our new Programme Director

This Summer, Michaëla joined our team as Programme Director: "I have a strong belief that things come your way when you are ready to receive them. So I am very happy that I was there at the right time and in the right place to become Director of the International Heritage Cooperation programme.

The last three years I have led a programme at the RCE to prepare the ratification in The Netherlands of the Faro Convention (The Value of Cultural Heritage for Society). This convention asks to recognise the central role of people and human values in the process of defining and managing cultural heritage. It points to heritage as a resource for human development, enhancement of cultural diversity and intercultural dialogue.

How to use the great potential of heritage in societal challenges is also the focus of the International Heritage Cooperation programme and I am very much looking forward to explore this path further with our partners all over the world."
 

Knowledge exchange and establishing networks

 
 
Building with a group of people in front of it, and white church behind some trees
Van Ostrande Radliff en Van Lindenhoutmuseum © Historic Albany Foundation | © Van Lindehoutmuseum

Final expert meeting on heritage conservation in the USA and the Netherlands

Heritage and urban development experts from the USA and the Netherlands will meet again on 21 October to discuss the results of their final meeting about Van Ostrande Radliff House in Albany (New York, USA) and Kinderdorp Neerbosch in Nijmegen (NL). The last theme of this international expert meeting will relate to restoration ethics, interventions and the use of (new) materials. Join us during this online public forum to learn more about these two historic sites and the urban development challenges they face, and to hear what the plans and solutions are for the restoration of these sites.

The online meeting takes place at 21 October from 15:00 through 17:00 (CET). Click the button below for more information about the event.
Read more about 21 October
 
A group of people seated and discussing
Participants of the 2019 edition of the training Sharing Stories on Contested Histories © RCE

Young experts from around the world to discuss methods to share stories on contested histories

Discussing global societal challenges while establishing networks with other experts from around the world: twenty-four young professionals from our programme’s partner countries will have this chance during the upcoming edition of Sharing Stories on Contested Histories. They will join us during a two-week online training programme in November, when they will explore together how they can ethically engage with complex heritage to shape more equitable futures. This training deals with challenges in the field of cultural heritage that are widely shared by bringing together professionals from different countries and backgrounds to exchange perspectives and develop new knowledge and practices together. Participants will discuss these topics based on four case study museums: Muquifu (Belo Horizonte, Brazil), Museum Multatuli (Rangkasbitung, Indonesia), Museum Sophiahof (The Hague, the Netherlands) and District Six Museum (Cape Town, South Africa).

The RCE organizes this training course in close collaboration with the Reinwardt Academy. In our December newsletter, we will give you an update on the insights participants gained and exchanged during this course.
About the training
 
Aerial photo of Casablanca
Casablanca was one of the UHS 7 case studies © Imad Dahmani

Lessons learned on four historic port cities and water challenges

Alexandria, Istanbul, Casablanca and Amsterdam: four historic port cities that differ largely in history and development, in morphology and context, in social and economic composition. Yet they share a global water challenge. How to use history to understand current water issues? How to protect the historic fabric against water threats, or how to adapt to them? How to combine heritage management and water management in a planning strategy?

These were the key questions addressed during the 7th edition of the Course on Urban Heritage Strategies (UHS), annually conducted by the RCE, Erasmus University Rotterdam and TU Delft. At the end of August, the participants presented their strategic action plans for the four case study cities, in the presence of the Dutch ambassador for International Cultural Cooperation, Mrs. Dewi van de Weerd.

The most striking conclusion to draw is that it was precisely the differences between the case cities that were most fruitful in finding local solutions. Differences urged the participants to reflect upon and re-think their home situation. It made them think outside the box and helped them find new answers to urgent matters. A most interesting conclusion, which we will keep in mind for future activities. Currently the RCE and the Turkish participants are discussing a follow-up on their findings in Istanbul.
Read about the participants' experiences
 

Updates on current and future collaborations

 
 

Human remains linked to the Dutch East India Company (VOC) reburied in Simon’s Town, South Africa

Last August saw the reburial of the human remains of at least 184 individuals linked to a former VOC hospital in Simon's Town that was used from 1765 to the beginning of the 19th century. The RCE has been involved ever since the initial excavations in 2019. Together with Leiden University, we coordinated further analysis to unravel the possible origins of the persons found buried. Lab results, in conjunction with archaeological and historical data, point strongly towards a domicile in Europe for these individuals.

The reburial represents one of the final phases in a concerted effort of archaeological company ACO Associates, Simon’s Town Museum, the Netherlands Embassy, Leiden University and the RCE to bring these people to their final resting place. They now lie buried in the Old Burying Ground in Seaforth, Simon’s Town. In our December newsletter, we will give you an update about this project.
 
 
Delftware tiles in a wall
Delftware tiles in the City Palace Museum of Udaipur © RCE

Looking into possible collaboration with City Palace Museum in Udaipur (India)

During the former policy period of this programme (2017-2020), the City Palace Museum of Udaipur in India contacted the RCE about a possible cooperation to conserve and promote a shared legacy at Udaipur. Because of the covid-pandemic, the RCE had to wait until now to look into this collaboration with India. The City Palace Museum is housed within the iconic,16th century palace complex at Udaipur, the former abode of the rulers of Mewar. The heritage in question leads us back to a trade mission of the VOC, led by Johan Ketelaar in 1711. The visit was depicted in several paintings that are now in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

One of the results of these ties between the two countries can be seen in Delftware tiles that are part of the collection of the museum. In September, our colleague Yolanda Ezendam visited the museum at the invitation of Prince Lakshyarai Singh (successor in the Mewar dynasty), to discuss a possible collaboration on the basis of knowledge exchange and to identify possible shared challenges. We will keep you informed about the next steps of this collaboration.
 

Capacity building

 
 

Cross-cultural knowledge sharing on audience engagement

In October, the RCE and the Reinwardt Academy will join the Museum Intensives Training Programme (MI) of the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Sri Lanka (MMCA Sri Lanka). MI is a series of training programmes organized for Sri Lankan professionals in museums and collection-based cultural institutions. The programme aims to catalyse knowledge-sharing and professional development in under-explored areas in the sector. The RCE and the Reinwardt Academy are working in partnership with MMCA to deliver the first Museum Intensives focusing on audience engagement, strengthening cross-cultural knowledge and expertise sharing between professionally engaged learning organizations in Sri Lanka and the Netherlands.

This Museum Intensives is supported by the Netherlands Embassy: “The Embassy is proud and pleased to have partnered with MMCA Sri Lanka in this ground-breaking initiative. Sri Lanka has a rich culture in terms of history and heritage and contemporary and modern art. The MI will bring these two together, and engage Sri Lankan and Dutch professionals. It will be a unique opportunity to exchange, learn, and inspire. The project will help to strengthen the capacity of Sri Lankan museum professionals to preserve and promote their culture and to further engage current and future generations,” Tanja Gonggrijp, former Ambassador for the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Sri Lanka.
 
 

Making co-created knowledge accessible

 
 
Covers publications
Covers of the first two publications

New series of publications on conservation of paintings

The practice of painting conservation has developed at an astounding pace. During a series of masterclasses and conferences, organized in the period 2012-2020 by the Foundation for Cultural Inventory (SCI) in India, Russia and Cuba to mutually exchange and deepen knowledge in relation to local contexts, it became apparent that not all professional conservators seem to have access to current information about this subject. The organizing parties - SCI together with SRAL –The Conservation Institute, the RCE, and Dutch embassies in the partner countries of the International Heritage Cooperation programme – therefore decided to create a series of six brochures on the conservation of paintings.

These brochures will be published online, and are accessible for professionals who want to know more about the subject. The first two publications – Dirt and Dirt Removal and Varnish Removal – are already available.
 
Blended
Logo of BlendEd

BlendEd learning, a joint collaboration

The BlendEd Platform is a joint initiative of the Faculty of Architecture at TU Delft (BK) and the Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS) at Erasmus University, Rotterdam. The platform displays educational videos that cover a variety of topics on urban development from both social science and design/planning perspectives. One of the three topics covered is Heritage Values.

The RCE joined the initiating parties by producing two of the videos on this topic. This contribution resulted from the close collaboration the RCE has with both institutes on the theme of Urban Heritage Strategies (UHS) as conducted within the International Heritage Cooperation programme. The videos will not only be used as the starting point for new interdisciplinary classes between the two academic institutes but they will also serve the RCE’s international hands-on projects.
Download the brochures
 
Watch the videos
   

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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