Share
On 30 June 2021, a Stakeholder Meeting on Documentary Heritage in Accessible Formats was held in Mongolia, organized by the Mongolian National Commission for UNESCO, with support of the UNESCO Beijing Cluster Office, in close consultation with the Ministry of Culture of Mongolia.
Twenty-one key stakeholders in the domain of digitization of heritage documents in Mongolia, including representatives from libraries, archives and museums, IT specialists, as well as representatives from organizations of persons with disabilities and other stakeholders interested in disability and accessibility aspects, participated in the meeting, and exchanged ideas on the way forward in preparing accessible documentary heritage for persons with disabilities.
Press Release – Auckland Museum
The new exhibition
Love & Loss, from Tāmaki Paenga Hira Auckland War Memorial Museum’s rich Documentary Heritage collection, explores expressions of love, loss, hope and longing shared between lovers, friends, and families from the 1800’s through the world wars up to present day.
Opening to the public on Wednesday 28 July, the exhibition features objects from the Museum’s manuscript collection as well as loans from the public, all of which explore human emotions and the need to share how we feel. Over half of the contemporary objects that form this exhibition were sourced through Auckland Museum’s public call out in 2020. The call out resulted in hundreds of submissions of personal communication that ranged from letters and scribbled notes to Facebook messages and emails.
Press Release – Auckland Museum The new exhibition Love & Loss , from Tmaki Paenga Hira Auckland War Memorial Museums rich Documentary Heritage collection, explores expressions of love, loss, hope and longing shared between lovers, friends, and families from the 1800s through …
The new exhibition
Love & Loss, from Tāmaki Paenga Hira Auckland War Memorial Museum’s rich Documentary Heritage collection, explores expressions of love, loss, hope and longing shared between lovers, friends, and families from the 1800’s through the world wars up to present day.
Opening to the public on Wednesday 28 July, the exhibition features objects from the Museum’s manuscript collection as well as loans from the public, all of which explore human emotions and the need to share how we feel. Over half of the contemporary objects that form this exhibition were sourced through Auckland Museum’s public call out in 2020. The call out resulted in hundreds of submissions of personal communica
2021-07-07 11:52:30
Ulaanbaatar /MONTSAME/ On 30 June 2021, a Stakeholder Meeting on Documentary Heritage in Accessible Formats was held in Mongolia, organized by the Mongolian National Commission for UNESCO, with support of the UNESCO Beijing Cluster Office, in close consultation with the Ministry of Culture of Mongolia.
Twenty-one key stakeholders in the domain of digitization of heritage documents in Mongolia, including representatives from libraries, archives and museums, IT specialists, as well as representatives from organizations of persons with disabilities and other stakeholders interested in disability and accessibility aspects, participated in the meeting, and exchanged ideas on the way forward in preparing accessible documentary heritage for persons with disabilities.
Wednesday, 7 July 2021, 1:17 pm
The new exhibition
Love &
Loss, from Tāmaki Paenga Hira Auckland War
Memorial Museum’s rich Documentary Heritage collection,
explores expressions of love, loss, hope and longing shared
between lovers, friends, and families from the 1800’s
through the world wars up to present day.
Opening to
the public on Wednesday 28 July, the exhibition features
objects from the Museum’s manuscript collection as well as
loans from the public, all of which explore human emotions
and the need to share how we feel. Over half of the
contemporary objects that form this exhibition were sourced
through Auckland Museum’s public