Staffordshire Hoard conservation opportunities

Kevin Leahy photographing a hoard fragmentBirmingham Museums & Art Gallery and Stoke Potteries Museum are seeking expressions of interest for several Conservation opportunities associated with the amazing Staffordshire Hoard. These would suit experienced conservation professionals and students and allow the successful applicants to influence the future of these objects in a world-class museum setting. Competition will no doubt be very fierce for these posts. Below are the basic details for each role and a PDF of the brief and please note that dates of closing differ for the first post and the second two posts.

Hoard Conservation Advisory Panel

For conservation Professionals, Scientists, Archaeologists and related professionals who wish to to join the Hoard Conservation Advisory Panel. The deadline for applications is June 30th. Download information on the Advisory panel specification.

Conservation professional placements

For conservation professionals who wish to take advantage of a unique professional development opportunity through contributing to the conservation of the Staffordshire Hoard as part of a placement. The deadline for applications is July 30th. Download information on the Conservation professionals specification.

Student placements

Student placements to contribute to the conservation of the Staffordshire Hoard. The first deadline for applications is July 30th. Download information on the Student placement specification.

If you require any further information please email Deborah Cane

New Centre for Audio-Visual Study and Practice in Archaeology

The Institute of Archaeology has recently agreed to host the new Centre for Audio-Visual Study and Practice in Archaeology (CASPAR). Archaeology has a long record of being a subject for television and radio, and is now making excellent use of the newer digital technologies. Sometimes the relationship between archaeology and audio-visual media has been controversial, yet there is no doubt that archaeology has benefited from widespread public exposure over the last 50 years, and that new technologies are allowing are allowing us to rethink how people engage with archaeology.

The aim of the Centre is to:

  1. advocate the greater use of audio-visual media within archaeology;
  2. be an active voice for greater use and understanding of archaeological practises and themes within broadcasting and ICT;
  3. enable inventive and creative use of audio-visual media by archaeologists;
  4. promote research into the relationship between audio-visual media and archaeology.

The Centre will pursue its aims through organising conferences and workshops; publishing books and articles; organising film festivals and showings; compiling and maintaining a database of archaeology films, TV and radio programmes and websites; helping to provide input into relevant university courses; helping to run research seminars at the Institute of Archaeology; and carrying out research into its area of study.

You are welcome to attend the launch and reception to mark the inauguration of the new Centre at 2.00 pm on the 23rd April 2010.

The programme for the afternoon is:

2:00 Steve Shennan, Director of the Institute of Archaeology, Introduction and welcome

2:30 Julian Richards, broadcaster, Archaeology on TV and radio

3:00 Dan Pett, British Museum, Archaeology on the Internet

3:45 Andy Gardner, Institute of Archaeology, Archaeology and gaming

4:15 Angela Piccini, Bristol University, Research into archaeology and
media

4:45 Don Henson, Hon. Director CASPAR, The potential and remit of the
Centre

5:00 Wine reception

If you would like to come along, please contact Don Henson at the Council for British Archaeology

World Archaeology Congress presentation

I’m on the way to Dublin right now and I’ve just finished my presentation for the session I’m speaking at tomorrow. It is now available on slideshare as I’ve just uploaded it from Gatwick. Probably not that useful without the words to accompany it….

World Archaeology Congress Paper

Wessex Archaeology site relaunched

Wessex Archaeology homepage

Wessex Archaeology homepage


I started this post about 3 weeks ago and forgot all about it. However, one of Tom Goskar’s tweets reminded me about the relaunch of Wessex Archaeology‘s website. Like Surrey Archaeology Society’s website, this is another site done with Drupal as the content system and it has been heavily modified to allow the Wessex team to present all the work that they do. Tom has now started a webmaster’s blog, which details how/ why/ when they are doing their work.

Their site now incorporates feeds from their scribd profile, podcasts, youtube video, flickr image feed and a range of syndicated feeds from other organisations as well as the implementation of Google mapping facilities across the pages. I think that Tom and his team have definitely raised the game for the majority of archaeological units, with LP archaeology coming a close second for now.

CHAT 2008

One of my colleagues (Hilary Orange) is involved in organising the conference outlined below and they are calling for papers:

‘HERITAGE CHAT’
November 14-16, 2008
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON

Hosted by Atkins Heritage, English Heritage and UCL Centre for Museums, Heritage and Material Culture

Concern for heritage of the recent past has long been confined to the particular interests of a sub-set of architectural historians for whom listing post-war buildings (notably of the reconstruction years) was a clear focus. Archaeologists are also now taking an active and enthusiastic interest in the modern period; the only surprise is that it has taken so long. After a steady start, and an almost inevitable concentration on industrial and military sites and landscapes, it has quickly become more than the fringe interest it perhaps once was, a side-show to the main attraction. In local planning authorities, archaeological units and trusts, as well as national agencies and universities, the heritage interest in contemporary and historical archaeology has now emerged with strength and alacrity. English Heritage’s Change and Creation programme, in partnership with Atkins Heritage, and the universities of London and Bristol is evidence of this, as is the Images of Change book (Sefryn Penrose 2007), the recent Modern Times issue of Conservation Bulletin (2007), numerous published articles and several entries in the Heritage Reader (Fairclough et al. 2008). A head of steam is quickly building.

CHAT (Contemporary and Historical Archaeology in Theory) is a dynamic forum for innovative critical discussion that seeks to challenge and push the limits of archaeological thinking. To date this has been achieved through five annual conferences, publications and an active email discussion group. This year’s conference takes CHAT in a new direction, exploring connections between these theoretical perspectives and ideals and the more traditional concerns of heritage management practice. What can CHAT offer heritage practitioners, and vice versa? How much of heritage management practice holds relevance to CHAT? Should the heritage sector retain its focus on that which is ‘old’ and ‘special’, or should we feel comfortable with a broader remit, accepting that what we have today (inherited from the past, and what we create and manufacture ourselves) is part of the longer-term process of change with which we, as archaeologists, are closely familiar? CHAT presents particular challenges for heritage practitioners and agencies: Value judgements for that which is new and unfamiliar, amongst culturally diverse communities, and the attendant issues of migrant heritage; traditional conceptions and practices for recording buildings versus the aesthetic and the evocative; the archaeology of the ephemeral, the intangible and the un-built, all things that are harder to trace in earlier periods; and how inter- or cross-disciplinary should we be? In a world of accountability, research frameworks and national research agenda, where should our priorities actually lie? What should a research strategy for contemporary and historical archaeology contain? And who is best qualified to do this work: archaeologists, or anthropologists, cultural geographers … artists and writers even?

Heritage CHAT provides an opportunity to examine some of these issues at close range, through plenary sessions that will contain theoretical and methodological perspectives on contemporary and historical archaeology, and examples of work in progress that address relevant themes. Papers are encouraged that challenge the very notion of heritage, and the commercial and corporate strategies that go with it, as are papers describing work on contemporary and historical archaeology which operate within more conventional heritage frameworks. Short (450 word) abstracts should be submitted to any of the organising committee (below) by email, by the end of May 2008.

Charlotte Frearson (charlotte.frearson@atkinsglobal.com)
Sarah May (sarah.may@english-heritage.org.uk)
Hilary Orange (h.orange@ucl.ac.uk)
Sefryn Penrose (Sefryn.penrose@atkinsglobal.com)
John Schofield (john.schofield@english-heritage.org.uk)
Conference poster