heritage in lockdown

“Virtual Volunteers” – the new lifeblood of the heritage sector?

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by Esther Wilson, Social Media and Digital Marketing Volunteer

COVID-19 has had an enormous impact upon all areas of our daily lives. For the heritage sector, this has been no different where lockdowns meant that, overnight, long-standing streams of support dried up. Perhaps the most well-covered aspect of this by the press and social media alike has been the loss of income from admissions-related revenue, plunging even longstanding and nationally-significant Trusts such as the Birmingham and York Museums Trusts’ into rocky financial waters, as well as smaller museum sites such as Bletchley Park. However, another key support channel has been lost; that of volunteers.

Volunteers are the lifeblood of many heritage and museum organisations, from assisting with essential collections practices to working at the coal-face of the visitor experience as passionate members of the guiding team. As lockdown slowly unfurls, sites and stores may begin to re-open but the difficulties in volunteer mobilisation are far from over. Usual organisational practices remain limited by social distancing guidelines. A key volunteer demographic is those seeking enrichment in their post-retirement years; by virtue of age a more ‘clinically at risk’ group when it comes to COVID-19 and perhaps more likely to be cautious in their own external activity.  Many other volunteering positions may be undertaken by students as part of university placements or college enrichment programmes; as a postgraduate student myself, I know that such schemes may now be difficult to arrange in the new age of online higher education learning. 

However, lockdown also provided an opportunity for organisations to adapt their practice, including through innovative uses of digital technology. Is remote assistance set to become a routine part of the ‘new normal’?

Foremost, it is important to note some difficulties with my line of enquiry. It has already been mentioned that many volunteers are those who have reached retirement; not only a more ‘clinically vulnerable’ demographic but one which generally has a lower digital skill set – this could be a key challenge to their ability to support heritage organisations in new ways. Many working adults who are now working from home may also find the prospect of spending more time in-front of a screen an unattractive prospect. Indeed, mere access to technology itself is a privilege not shared by all members of society due to financial barriers, unlike the ability to spend one’s free time in a like manner. My own position is one of privilege; as a postgraduate student, I have access to technology which enables me to complete my postgraduate studies, and both in the face of redundancy and alongside employment, has also allowed me to exchange my in-person assistance to support from the comfort of my sofa. 

Virtual volunteering within the heritage sector is actually not a new concept. For many years, large organisations from the Smithsonian across the pond to our own Imperial War Museum and National Archives have facilitated online volunteering opportunities such as transcription or research contributions, enabling volunteers worldwide to contribute to internationally-significant heritage work on their own terms. However, some organisations have more recently been able to adapt this practice and take it further. 

One approach which has really stood out to me is that of the Museum of East Anglian Life (MEAL). As a regular, local heritage volunteer and staff member for a number of years, I knew that lockdown was beginning to hit heritage hard. So, following MEAL’s advertisement on the well-known Leicester Museum Jobs Desk, I was excited at the prospect of being able to assist in the management of their collections from my home several hours away. Combined with a great deal of time spent photographing documentation cards by the on-site team, MEAL’s use of online collections management platform ‘eHive’ has enabled a large team of remote volunteers to digitise documentation cards as well as correct the Museum’s enormous local history database where necessary. Since only June, over 3,000 records have been digitised and made available for public access – a 300% increase and a real success story in opening up collections beyond the walls of the physical store or archive, as well as doing so in a digital format which should survive the test of time. Not all heritage currently use or have the ability to use such accessible platforms as ‘eHive’, particularly after the financial burdens placed on many heritage organisations over lockdown. However, it certainly appears a positive example which suggests that it may be possible for some elements of the labour-intensive collections management processes to be further opened-up to a remote public-at-large, providing museum sites with continued support and forging meaningful connections and experiences for both new and now-distanced volunteer teams. This work could even be further enhanced by the use of new technologies and practices such as photogrammetry, where teams could be trained and directed in collections digitisation with ease using new-found favourite platforms Zoom or Microsoft Teams. 

The use of such communication channels can also enable more unique volunteering opportunities to flourish which may not have otherwise been considered or even possible. I have been privileged to work with Experience Heritage in such a voluntary capacity and the opportunity to give an exciting, digital heritage start-up company an extra helping-hand has been invaluable. The countless enormous difficulties which the novel Coronavirus has placed upon our society and heritage sector has undoubtedly reverberated out to Experience Heritage as a company; with tighter budgets for heritage reinterpretation and many organisations facing serious financial difficulties, it could be easy to see this period in only a negative light. However, recent circumstances have also emphasised the need for us to be more adaptable in our approaches to work and life. What would have previously been a less-accessible, office-based position set around particular office-hours has become an entirely flexible opportunity, where I’m more able to assist on an increased, entirely remote basis, keeping in close contact with the company through G-Suite and Zoom whilst completing tasks at times which work best for all of us around existing commitments. We have been able to grow our network and skills as a company so that we can be best placed to support the heritage sector as it begins to tentatively emerge on the other side, honing skills in 3D-modelling, augmented reality and virtual reality, so that we can provide even better experiences for visitors when recovering heritage organisations are ready for them. The social-distancing demands brought by COVID-19 have only emphasised to us all how critical a sound grasp of even basic digital technology is, whilst also suggesting that more versatile, out-of-the-box thinking about how to effectively wield the benefits of technology can bring about unexpected success.

‘Virtual volunteering’ may be an opportunity which many otherwise-volunteers and heritage organisations are unable to access in the manners in which some have been able. However, recent months have highlighted how digital solutions may make a real positive difference in effectively enabling the ‘new normal’ way of operation for many museum and heritage sites across the country and their networks, providing volunteers both old and new with a way to once again do what they do best; support and share the heritage we all know and love. 

Moving forward in digital heritage

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The following is a guest article written by Owen Burton for and originally posted in Visitor Focus on the Association of Independent Museums website.

Working in digital heritage is exciting: as technology improves all the time, the possibilities of what can be achieved continue to grow. Here AIM Associate Supplier Experience Heritage explore some of the best methods for heritage sites to produce engaging displays while managing the impact of social distancing.

Possibilities with Photogrammetry and Augmented Reality
Photogrammetry (creating a 3D model by stringing together a group of photographs) makes it possible for heritage sites to have pieces of their collection accessible online. People can interact with these objects in a new way and from different angles, all from the comfort of their own living room. In these challenging times, it might be possible for heritage site staff to be taught how to take the required photos of a given object or even how to use the modelling software for themselves.

Augmented Reality mobile apps can place historic reconstructions of sites over the current landscape to enable the public to visualise what used to be there, providing opportunities for storytelling to help bring inaccessible sites to life.

Mobile apps and virtual tours
There is an increasing awareness of the possibilities of heritage trail and self-guided tour mobile apps another opportunity for interactive engagement with history while maintaining social distancing. Virtual tours have allowed digital access to sites that have been closed during lockdown, as people have been virtually wandering around such sites as the British Museum, the Louvre and the Van Gogh Museum.

Pause for thought . . . and communication
Lockdown has provided us with opportunities to learn and space to reflect. Heritage roundtables and webinars have lent greater clarity to the day-to-day realities of what sites have been going through and what their focus points are. These priorities have included expanding audience engagement through digital opportunities and ensuring accessibility in digital communication for disabilities.

If you would like to explore possibilities for digital engagement, like photogrammetry, augmented reality or heritage trail apps, Experience Heritage would love to help. Visit our website at www.experience-heritage.com or email us at info@experience-heritage.com.

Pictured: Mockup imagining of an AR app for Slingsby Castle by Experience Heritage.

Can Social Media Efforts Save Cultural Organisations After COVID-19?

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By Esther Wilson, digital marketing volunteer at Experience Heritage

With Boris Johnson’s ordering of lockdown on 23rd March 2020, it was clear that the Coronavirus pandemic had become something which would significantly affect our arts and heritage sectors in the UK. Overnight, many sites and organisations lost their main form of revenue for what would turn out to be at least 103 days of closed doors, until museums were legally able to begin reopening procedures on 4th July. This difficult period demanded a rapid reconsideration of how the sector engages with visitors and audiences. The innovative and fantastic moves towards digital forms of interpretation and engagement within heritage sites, such as Augmented Reality (AR), Virtual Reality (VR) and 3D-Modelling, were already indicators of a vibrantly digitalising sector. But, with closed doors, these would no longer be enough to bridge the gap during lockdown; the new and unprecedented situation demanded yet further innovation in order to engage audiences and try to secure financial support. 

The vast potential for using social media to enable public engagement with important heritage work is something which quickly became apparent. With their enormous and easily accessible reach, channels such as Twitter and Instagram have allowed organisations to not only engage their existing audiences barred from a physical visit, but expand their reach by engaging new groups of people.

 
 

One of my favourite examples, and perhaps most impressive relative to its size, has been the Yorkshire Museum and its parent organisation, regional heritage group York Museums Trust. At the start of July, York Museum’s Trust themselves had significant engagement success with a series of Twitter posts entitled ‘Judi Dench as objects in our collection – a thread’. Whilst this did not use a hashtag, the en-vogue post itself received more than 8,500 likes and was widely shared across a diverse range of media outlets, including popular international channels ‘Bored Panda’ and ‘Flipboard’. However, this achievement was to be outdone by one of their own sites, the Yorkshire Museum. Back in April, the Yorkshire Museum launched a weekly ‘#CURATORBATTLE,’ inviting heritage organisations from around the world to share their best collection pieces along a given theme. The first major hit was #CreepiestObject,’ which attracted not only 13,700 international ‘likes’ on the original collection-sharing post, but made regional and national headlines, including coverage by the BBC. Yet, this success was arguably modest in comparison to the achievements of ‘#BestMuseumBum,’ launched on 26th June and still being circulated at the time of writing on 27th July. Whilst the original post achieved around 2,600 likes, its hashtag went truly global. For a regional museum, the Yorkshire has attracted incredible levels of high-profile and populist engagement worldwide, from international media companies such as the Guardian and Mashable South East Asia, to specialist sites such as ArtNet and once again the popular website BoredPanda. Surely, the success that York Museum’s Trust has received is not only an inspirational and practical example of successful social media engagement techniques and an indicator of the potential influence that social media holds for the heritage sector when it is used effectively; at a time when the sector faces uncertainty, York Museum Trust’s success has also served to demonstrate the extent to which heritage and cultural organisations are appreciated and needed by the public, especially when physically inaccessible.

 
 

Even as the UK lockdown slowly unfurls, the road ahead is set to be difficult. For many organisations, the search for safe and financially viable re-opening practice is set to continue into 2021 and an unfortunate number have already been forced into redundancy talks, including significant players such as Tate and Historic Royal Palaces. Some organisations, such as Birmingham Museums Trust, are reported to face losing up to half of their staff due to a swathe of unavoidable redundancies, news which provoked tragic outcry on social media when it was announced on 24th July. This means that deeper long-term reconsideration of heritage practice has been required, as well as new funding opportunities in addition to the government-backed £1.57bn cultural assistance package announced on 5th July. 

Here, the effective wielding of social media channels such as Twitter and digital platforms such as Zoom have proved invaluable means to directly support heritage professionals themselves whilst being reduced to furlough, working from home or in vastly reduced on-site capacities.

 
 

Academic players such as the UCL Heritage Science & Engineering Network have been keen to encourage cross-industry discussions through a podcast series on the significance of the pandemic for arts and culture. Both the Museums Association and the Association of Independent Museums have promoted webinar series to help members tackle the specific work-based challenges surrounding existing heritage practice in the ‘new normal’. Online Twitter-based discussions for heritage professionals have also played a key role in promoting active discussion, exemplified by hashtags such as ‘MACoronavirusConverstions’ from the Museums Association, along with ‘#MuseumHour’ from an independent account without organisational affiliation, Museum Hour; both have facilitated enormously popular online discussions around key topics such as museum practice and professional wellbeing. The Museums Association have also utilised social media as a way to reach out to the many heritage professionals facing personal financial struggles, inviting applications to their individual ‘benevolence fund’. Organisations such as Arts Council England and the Heritage Lottery Fund have similarly sought to share their news of wider financial assistance packages through social media, as additionally employed by lesser-known charitable players such as the Julia & Hans Rausing Trust. The true practical effectiveness of such support channels is yet to be fully understood, but given their apparent popularity, it certainly seems that such approaches are here to stay.  

 
 

As early as 30th May, international polls by UNESCO and ICOM were already indicating that up to 1 in 8 heritage sites across the world may be set to close. Even as some countries come out of lockdown, with the uncertainties of how the Covid-19 threat will be diminished, fear still hovers over the future of heritage work which is perhaps more important in the tumultuous and uncertain post-Covid-19 age than ever before. Will the use of social media be a sufficient lifejacket for our important cultural organisations during these rough and unpredictable seas? With the tide undeniably towards the digitalisation of the heritage sector, I certainly think it could have an important part to play. Perhaps dovetailed with already increasingly popular digital techniques such as AR, VR, virtual tours and 3D modelling, social media could be used to both bring truly engaging heritage encounters even closer to home and further encourage in-person visits once the museum doors are open wide once again. Nevertheless, when it comes to digital approaches to heritage, the sector certainly cannot afford to return to the ‘old normal’.