Museum projects look north, east and down at their roots

25.05.2023 I More news

Three projects are receiving DKK 14 million from VELUX FONDEN to strengthen research and rethink knowledge dissemination at Danish museums. This is the last time that grants will be awarded under the foundation’s Museum Programme, which was established in 2014.

Process

VELUX FONDEN received a total of 15 expressions of interest from Danish museums and universities via the Museums Programme’s open call in 2022. Of these, seven project proposals were invited to prepare a full application and were granted project maturation funds of up to DKK 100,000.

What roles do oral traditions and family archives play in people’s understanding of history in Greenland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Denmark, and how can everyday stories be conveyed in new ways? Can historical dramas from China, Japan and South Korea combined with animations bring an old museum collection from East Asia to life and attract a younger audience? How can the entry of houseplants into Danish homes and interior paintings in the 19th century create new models for museum pedagogy and visitor engagement?

These are the focal points of the three projects being funded this year by VELUX FONDEN under its Museum Programme.

“Research and knowledge dissemination are both key to the development of our museums,” says Henrik Tronier, head of programme for VELUX FONDEN’s Humanities grant area. “Without research, museums would be repositories of outdated knowledge disseminated in outdated ways; without innovative and engaging knowledge dissemination, new research would never benefit the general public or strengthen the democratic dialogue. These three projects take original approaches to combining research and knowledge dissemination in one and the same process which is centred around the inclusion of citizens’ own experiences. In doing so, they pave the way for new perspectives and broader dialogues on issues and societal challenges of topical importance.”

The programme’s last grants

The Museum Programme was developed in collaboration with Danish museums to support original and integrated research and knowledge dissemination projects that strengthen collaboration between museum researchers and communicators and university humanities researchers. Since the programme was established in 2014, VELUX FONDEN has granted more than DKK 143 million to 31 wide-ranging museum projects across Denmark. The projects have produced good results while managing to build solid bridges between museums and universities. However, this year’s grants are the last in the programme, as there are now more funding opportunities in the area, and because the foundation has in connection with its strategy work decided to focus instead on new ways of building bridges bridge-building between the humanities and arts and culture.

Common narrative

This year’s three museum projects all look at the collaboration between the research and knowledge dissemination activities of museums. And as the project titles show, they all focus on storytelling – from ‘North Atlantic Everyday Stories’ and ‘New East Asian Museum Tales’ to ‘Hidden Plant Stories’.

At Moesgaard Museum and the four national museums, they will weave together locally anchored personal everyday stories from settlements in Greenland, the Faroe Islands and Iceland to create a polyphonic historical map. The project manager, Associate Professor Christian Vium from Aarhus University, explains:

“The present is defined by how we remember and communicate our shared history. In recent years, there has been growing interest in colonial history, living cultural heritage and memory work in the North Atlantic area. Qualitative research into oral traditions and local archives can provide new insights into how locally rooted everyday stories become interwoven with major historical events. In the project, we look forward to collaborating on the preservation and dissemination of stories and voices that are often overlooked. And in so doing, contribute to a democratic and fine-meshed take on our shared history, which will be made available to the public through open access publications, exhibitions, podcasts and an online platform.”  

The three projects:

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