Australia ICOMOS E-Mail News No. 921

NEW ITEMS

  1. [NEW ITEM] Coronavirus GA2020 Statement 2 – April 2020
  2. [NEW ITEM] International Day for Monuments and Sites 2020 – Sharing and Showcasing Science Heritage
  3. [NEW ITEM] ICIP 2020 conference, 28-29 September 2020, Cambodia – CANCELLED
  4. [NEW ITEM] WEBINAR: Protecting Our Cultural Icons From Fire, 13 April
  5. [NEW ITEM] Living Heritage Grants Program – due date for applications to Round 5 extended
  6. [NEW ISSUE] The Johnston Collection – At Home With TJC
  7. [NEW ISSUE] Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) bulletin
  8. [NEW ISSUE] Cambridge Heritage Research Centre bulletin

GA2020 SYDNEY ITEMS

COURSES / AWARDS / GRANTS PROGRAMS / OTHER – CALL FOR APPLICATIONS / NOMINATIONS / SUBMISSIONS / EOIs

MISCELLANEOUS OTHER

SITUATIONS VACANT / WANTED

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NEW ITEMS

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1. [NEW ITEM] Coronavirus GA2020 Statement 2 – April 2020

Australia ICOMOS and the GA2020 team continue to monitor the COVID-19 situation and extend their best wishes to ICOMOS members and their families.

It is apparent that owing to global and domestic travel restrictions, altered economic circumstances and general risk and uncertainty, it will not be possible for GA2020 to proceed as originally envisaged in October 2020.

We are examining alternative scenarios, including modification, deferral and cancellation of the event in Sydney. A final decision (including consideration of refunds, where applicable) will be made and announced during May 2020.

In the meantime, the GA 2020 registration process and marketing activities are currently suspended and other preparatory activities will be scaled-back or adjusted.

We will continue to place the health and safety of GA2020 delegates and ICOMOS and venue staff at the forefront of our decision making. We will follow the advice of the World Health Organisation and will comply with the requirements of the Australian Government.

Australia ICOMOS remains committed to supporting and enriching the global work of ICOMOS.

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2. [NEW ITEM] International Day for Monuments and Sites 2020 – Sharing and Showcasing Science Heritage

As part of celebrating the 2020 International Day for Monuments and Sites, Australia ICOMOS will be sharing and showcasing some of Australia’s significant science heritage – the forgotten and invisible, as well as the well known. 

Science heritage is a heritage that is shared across scientific disciplines and technologies and between scientists/technologists and heritage practitioners, and should be shared more broadly with the community; and it is a shared responsibility. Sharing our knowledge of Australia’s science heritage is therefore an excellent fit with this year’s theme for the International Day for Monuments and Sites, Shared Cultures, Shared Heritage, Shared Responsibility.

Greater profiling of Australia’s science heritage was also a key recommendation from the 2018 Australia ICOMOS Science Heritage Symposium Under the Microscope – Exploring Science Heritage. We also see this initiative as potentially being a starting point for a Science Heritage Inventory, another key recommendation of the Symposium. (Note: The Proceedings of this symposium are due out soon).

How will we ‘share and showcase’ Australia’s science heritage?

Australia ICOMOS is creating a Science Heritage Showcase page on its website. We will be progressively uploading images and summary information about Australia’s science heritage on this page.

How can you help? 

Australia ICOMOS will be relying on scientists/technologists, heritage practitioners and members of the community, ie. you, to populate this page. So, if you have a favourite (or several favourite) science heritage examples (these can be landscapes, places, features, objects or documents) please let us know about them. Please also let others know about this initiative and encourage them to participate by providing us with science heritage examples.

What data do you need to provide?

For each science heritage example please submit 1-2 images (with captions) with an accompanying short statement (no more than 2 page) of the place. This statement needs to include:

  • the place/item name
  • location (nearest town and state) and holding institution if relevant
  • a brief description of what it is
  • a summary of its history
  • a brief statement of its significance
  • the name of the person making the contribution (and area of professional expertise if relevant) 
  • a contact email address

Note: images should have the relevant permissions for public domain use. Please email your contributions to Anne McConnell. Please note that all contributions will be reviewed for accuracy, relevance and appropriate length, and that Australia ICOMOS reserves the right not to accept a contribution if it believes it does not meet these criteria.

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3. [NEW ITEM] ICIP 2020 conference, 28-29 September 2020, Cambodia – CANCELLED

It is with great regret that the ICIP Board announces the cancellation of our 2020 interpretation conference in Angkor, Cambodia. We are facing extraordinary challenges around the world, including uncertainty about how long COVID-19 quarantine in different countries will last. The virus has also had severe economic effects on all industries. The health and welfare of conference participants is our top concern and we wish everyone who expressed interest in the conference well.

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4. [NEW ITEM] WEBINAR: Protecting Our Cultural Icons From Fire, 13 April

Protecting Our Cultural Icons From Fire: Lessons learned from Notre-Dame and beyond

Featuring:

  • Bénédicte de Montlaur, CEO, World Monuments Fund
  • Chris Marrion, Founder, Marrion Fire & Risk Consulting

12pm, Monday 13 April 2020
$10 General Public

Fires continue to adversely impact our cultural heritage. This includes our historic, sacred structures like Notre Dame in Paris and St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Church in New York, as well as invaluable collections like those in Brazil’s National Museum. Other cultural heritage sites and structures, such as historic ships (Cutty Sark), bridges (Kapellbrücke Bridge, Switzerland), national monuments (Namdaemun Gate, South Korea), and tombs (Kasubi Tombs, Uganda) have also experienced significant fires. Whether a World Heritage Site or an important monument within our local community, they each represent significant losses when damaged or destroyed by fire.

For more information about this webinar, click here.

REGISTER HERE

This event is a live webinar. Registrants will be emailed a link to access the program.

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5. [NEW ITEM] Living Heritage Grants Program – due date for applications to Round 5 extended

With the ongoing situation surrounding COVID-19, Heritage Victoria understands that it may be difficult to finalise applications for Round 5 of the Living Heritage Grants Program before Thursday 9 April 2020.

To assist with this, the application closing date will be extended. Heritage Victoria will advise the new closing date as soon as possible at at this link. The 2020 Program Guidelines and Frequently Asked Questions will be updated with the new timelines and current Round 5 applicants will be notified.   

The Living Heritage Team are working remotely at the moment. The best way to contact the Living Heritage Team is via email. If you’d like a call back please include your phone number and we will call you back as soon as possible. Thank you for your understanding.

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6. [NEW ISSUE] The Johnston Collection – At Home With TJC

Engage with The Johnston Collection from home: At Home With TJC – April 2020

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7. [NEW ISSUE] Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) bulletin

To view the latest issue of the GCI bulletin, click here.

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8. [NEW ISSUE] Cambridge Heritage Research Centre bulletin

To read the latest Cambridge Heritage Research Centre bulletin, click on the following link.

 

Please note the corrections below to this issue:

Baillie B., Sørensen M. L. S. (eds) (2020) Heritage Challenges in Africa: Communities and Sustainable Development. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham

“The richness of Africa’s heritage at times stands in stark contrast to the economic, health, political and societal challenges faced.

Development is essential but in what forms? For whom? Following whose agendas? At what costs? This book explores how heritage can promote, secure, or undermine sustainable development with special focus on sub-Saharan Africa, and in turn, how this affects conceptions of heritage. The chapters in this volume identify shared challenges, good practices and failures, and use specific case studies to provide detailed insights into varied forms of heritage and heritage defining processes on the continent. By critically analyzing the often romanticized discourses of ‘heritage,’ ‘community engagement,’ and ‘sustainable development’ the volume suggests ways of harnessing aspects of heritage to tackle some of the socio-economic and political pressures facing heritage practices on the continent, including the legacies of colonialism.”

***

Sørensen M., Viejo-Rose D., Filippucci P. (eds) (2020) Memorials in the Aftermath of Armed Conflict. Palgrave Studies in Cultural Heritage and Conflict. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham

“Margaret Comer’s chapter ‘Heritagization of the Gulag: A Case Study from the Solovetsky Islands’, focuses on different heritagization methods and motivations at dark heritage sites in the Solovetsky Islands, Russia. This chapter categorizes and analyzes the various forms and narratives of memorialization of the victims of Soviet repression at the site of the first Soviet gulag. Further, it introduces the concept of ‘compartmentalization’ as a way of viewing and analyzing overlapping (sometimes contradictory) heritagization methods and narratives within and between dark heritage sites”.

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GA2020 SYDNEY ITEMS

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Coronavirus GA2020 Statement 1 – March 2020

We understand many of you may have concerns about the coronavirus (COVID-19) and how that may affect GA2020 in Sydney, this coming October.

Australia ICOMOS and the GA2020 team are monitoring the COVID-19 situation, which is changing very rapidly at present. At this time, there are a range of restrictions in place, which affect travel to Australia. As this is a rapidly-evolving situation, it is not possible to provide advice about travel in September / October, nor to speculate about the prospect that GA2020 may be amended, deferred or cancelled.

We will at all times place the health and safety of GA2020 delegates at the forefront of our decision making. We will follow advice of the World Health Organisation and will comply with the requirements of the Australian Government.

We may issue a revised registration timetable and updated cancellation and refund policy – and would do so well before the current GA2020 early bird registration date of 3 June 2020.

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COURSES / AWARDS / GRANTS PROGRAMS / OTHER – CALL FOR APPLICATIONS / NOMINATIONS / SUBMISSIONS / EOI

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Blue Shield Australia bushfire impact survey – contribute by 9 April

Blue Shield Australia (BSA) is conducting a survey to quantify the impact of the bushfires and extreme weather events experienced across Australia from 1 November 2019 to 31 January 2020. The information will be aggregated to provide an overall cost to the sector of natural disasters this season. A report will be published using the results, which will be made available on the Blue Shield Australia website. BSA will not identify individual institutions’ results. The questions in the survey relate to visitor numbers, building closures, staff absences, technical issues, impact on collections and on revenue.

Please respond on behalf of your institution, rather than on an individual or department basis. There are 20 questions and it should only take 10-15 minutes to complete. All questions are optional, so if you don’t know the answer, move on to the next.

>> link to the survey

Deadline for responses is close of business Thursday 9 April 2020.

If you have any questions, please email Blue Shield Australia.

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Old Cities, New Challenges conservation course, 13-21 November 2020, George Town – applications close 15 April

The Getty Conservation Institute has recently announced the next Old Cities, New Challenges conservation course, which will take place in George Town from 13-21 November 2020 (participants to arrive by Wednesday 11 November).

A short description of the course and the application material can be accessed at the Getty Conservation Institute website.

The course application deadline is 15 April 2020 and the Getty looks forward to welcoming another stimulating group of interested young professionals to George Town.

NOTE: Please read the important update in relation to the coronavirus, at the link above

Recently, the Getty Magazine published a short article about the Penang course – click on this link to download the latest issue.

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Two PhD scholarships investigating the role of cultural fire on traditional Aboriginal food production – EOIs due 17 April

La Trobe University is now advertising two PhD scholarships to carry out research on the role of cultural fire on traditional Aboriginal food production. The scholarships are offered by the Centre for the Study of the Inland and the Centre for Future Landscapes in partnership with the Dja Dja Wurrung Clans Aboriginal Corporation and Central Victoria Biolinks Alliance.

Expressions of interest are required by 17 April 2020, with a view to commencing in Semester 2, 2020. Aboriginal people are particularly encouraged to apply. Further details are below.

Historic mapping PhD

Aims to collate archival sources in a GIS database as a means of mapping historic cultural burning and food production activities.

>> click here for more information

>> contact Prof. Susan Lawrence, Centre for the Study of the Inland by email

Plant ecology PhD

Focussed on botanical survey, plant population ecology, glasshouse trials and monitoring of cultural burns at research sites on country to increase knowledge for the on-going protection and management of traditional yam-field grasslands.

>> click here for more information

>> contact Dr. Jim Radford, Centre for Future Landscapes by email

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George Alexander Foundation International Fellowships – applications open and close 24 April

Are you aged 18-35, have an innovative idea to improve your sector and would like a Fellowship to carry out international applied research? Then read on…

The George Alexander Foundation and the International Specialised Skills Institute (ISS Institute) are offering five (5) international applied research Fellowships in the amount of $10,000 (less GST) each.

The 2020 George Alexander Foundation International Fellowship provides an opportunity for individuals to acquire higher-level skills and drive leading practice and innovation in Australia. It is intended that the Fellowship will demonstrate potential benefits for, and application in, Australia.

Applications should focus on the following areas:

  • Environment and Sustainability (this area can include heritage)
  • Alternative Energy
  • Education Sector
  • Conservation

However, if you have an innovative or significant Fellowship Proposal in an alternative field this may also be considered. Applications are welcome from residents of any state in Australia.

For more information, visit this link.

Please note: if you are considering applying for a Fellowship, travel times can be negotiated due to current/potential travel restrictions.

Applications are now open and close at 4pm, 24 April 2020.

Download the 2020 GAF International Fellowship flyer.

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2020 Community Heritage Grants – applications close 4 May 2020

Applications for the 2020 Community Heritage Grants (CHG) program are now open.

The CHG program provides grants of up to $15,000 to community organisations such as libraries, archives, museums, genealogical and historical societies, multicultural and Indigenous groups. The grants are provided to assist with the preservation of locally owned, but nationally significant collections of materials that are publicly accessible including artefacts, letters, diaries, maps, photographs, and audio visual material.

For details on how to apply, see the guidelines and application form.

Applications close 5pm, Monday 4 May 2020 (AEST).

Download the 2020 Community Heritage Grants flyer.

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Advanced Masters in Structural Analysis of Monuments and Historical Constructions – applications close 20 May 2020

After 10 years of European funding, 400 students and 65 countries, applications for the Advanced Masters in Structural Analysis of Monuments and Historical Constructions are opened up to 20 May 2020. This international course on the conservation of heritage structures was the winner of the 2017 European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage “Europa Nostra”, and presents a unique opportunity to meet people from all over the world.

This Masters Course, which is running its 13th Edition, is organized by a consortium of leading European Universities/Research Institutions in the field, including the University of Minho (coordinating institution, Portugal), the Technical University of Catalonia (Spain), the Czech Technical University in Prague (Czech Republic), the University of Padua (Italy) and the Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics of the Czech Academy of Sciences (Czech Republic).

The course combines the most recent advances in research and development with practical applications.

A significant number of scholarships, ranging from 4,000 to 13,000 Euro, are available to students of any nationality.

Please find full details on the MSc programme, as well as the electronic application procedure, at the course website.

Visit also the SAHC blog and connect via LinkedIn.

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Change Over Time journal – call for abstracts deadline: 5 June 2020

Abstract submissions are invited for the next issue of the journal Change Over Time: An International Journal of Conservation and the Built Environment, published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.

10.2 INTEGRITY | Guest Editor: Jukka Jokilehto

The concept of “integrity” is central to the organizing principles and values of heritage conservation and is frequently evoked in international charters, conventions, and official recommendations. Generally speaking, integrity refers to the wholeness or intactness of a tangible object, place, or property and is a measure by which UNESCO determines the Outstanding Universal Value of a site. As a guiding principle of conservation practice, the concept of integrity has evolved from 19th century ideas of the artist’s intent, which located integrity in a moment in time (Viollet le Duc), to 21st century framings of integrity as an emergent condition as proposed by the 2005 Faro Framework Convention, which suggests that integrity is neither fixed nor static but is understood through a process of interpreting, respecting, and negotiating complex, and at times, contentious values.

Abstracts of 200-300 words are due by 5 June 2020.

For more detailed information, see the CoT_Integrity_CFA_FINAL.

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MISCELLANEOUS OTHER

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Closed by COVID-19 – Checklist for GLAMs and Historical and Heritage Sites

Our colleagues at Blue Shield Australia and the Australian Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Material (AICCM) are pleased to release this Guide, which has been produced to provide guidance for people who are responsible for closing collections of movable cultural heritage in collecting organisations such as archives, galleries, herbaria, historical societies, libraries and museums and at heritage sites.

>> Visit the AICCM webpage

>> Visit the Blue Shield Australia webpage

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Certificate III in Heritage Trade Skills approved

A Certificate III in Heritage Trade Skills has been approved by the national training regulator ASQA. This is the first stage in being able to offer practical heritage trade skills training at heritage listed locations.

The qualification includes a number of units that can be broken up into short courses. The course is suitable for existing tradespeople, pre-vocational students and heritage property owners. The qualification includes an “Introduction to working on heritage sites” unit that can be delivered as a one-day course at a heritage site. This unit is suitable for both tradespeople and heritage home owners. It provides people with the skills and knowledge to understand the types of building materials that should and shouldn’t be use on listed sites, what heritage protections mean and the roles and responsibilities of people working in the industry.

Course materials are being developed with the view for training to begin in 2021. The qualification, and units that sit within the course, will be available for licensing for delivery from that time. Trainers will need to hold a Certificate IV in Training & Assessment, be trade-qualified, and either ICOMOS members or be able to demonstrate suitable experience working on heritage projects. Details of the course are available at this link and by contacting Trisch Baff by email.

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SITUATIONS VACANT / WANTED

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SITUATION VACANT Lecturer in Heritage Studies, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge

Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge is looking to appoint a new Lecturer in Heritage Studies. The successful candidate will play a crucial role in the further development of research and the future direction of the Department and the Cambridge Heritage Research Centre.

The closing date for applications is 8 May 2020 and further information and a link to apply can be found at this link.

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SITUATION VACANT Heritage Consultant, WOLFPEAK – Environment & Heritage, Sydney

WOLFPEAK – Environment & Heritage
HERITAGE CONSULTANT

WolfPeak is currently seeking an experienced Heritage Consultant to join our heritage team and assist with a variety of work and projects. Based in the Sydney CBD, we offer a friendly office environment with flexible working arrangements. Salary commensurate with experience and skills.

To undertake this role it is preferred that you have:

  • Relevant tertiary and professional qualifications in History, Archaeology, Heritage Management or a similar discipline OR equivalent experience
  • Demonstrated experience in archaeology / heritage management in either a consulting or public-sector environment
  • Sound understanding of the NSW legislative and policy framework for heritage approvals
  • Demonstrated experience in the preparation of heritage assessment documentation such as heritage impact assessments, archaeological survey reports, statements of heritage significance, cultural heritage assessment reports and heritage management plans
  • Excellent time and project management skills
  • A focus on client service excellence
  • Ability to build positive stakeholder relationships
  • Current drivers’ licence
  • Willingness to travel if required, including to regional / remote areas

Diversity and Flexibility

Fostering gender balance, diversity and acceptance of flexible working for men and women is central to the way WolfPeak does business. WolfPeak is committed to providing Equal Employment Opportunities and invites applications from people of all nationalities, genders and cultural backgrounds, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.

Email your CV to Kylie or give her a call on 0418 218 151 for further information.

We are looking to appoint this position as soon as possible so encourage applications to be lodged ASAP.

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in the Australia ICOMOS Email News are not necessarily those of Australia ICOMOS Inc. or its Executive Committee. The text of Australia ICOMOS Email news is drawn from various sources including organizations other than Australia ICOMOS Inc. The Australia ICOMOS Email news serves solely as an information source and aims to present a wide range of opinions which may be of interest to readers. Articles submitted for inclusion may be edited.

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Australia ICOMOS Secretariat
Georgia Meros
Secretariat Executive Officer
Deakin University
221 Burwood Highway
Burwood VIC 3125
Telephone: (03) 9251 7131
Email: austicomos@deakin.edu.au
http://www.icomos.org/australia

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