Project Partners
Newcastle University is very pleased to be working with the following sector partners on the development and delivery of this project:
Arts&Heritage is an independent agency that supports heritage organisations and museums to place contemporary art at the heart of their programming to bring alive narratives, atmosphere, architecture, and history and provide new perspectives to heritage contexts. This approach challenges audience expectations and preconceptions by producing projects that present history in unexpected, imaginative, and unusual ways. Find out more about Arts&Heritage
Artist’s Studio Museum Network is an international support organisation representing over 150 historic artists’ studio museums in Europe and the UK. Its aim is to bring single- artist studio/house museums across Europe and around the world closer together in partnership. Its member sites include, for example, painter Claude Monet’s famous house at Giverny, architect Alvar Aalto’s ‘Romantic Functionalist’ home in Helsinki, and the Brussels home of Surrealist artist ReneĢ Magritte. The Artist's Studio Museum Network was initiated by Watts Gallery – Artists' Village (in Surrey) and is run with the support of the Tavolozza Foundation and the Heritage Lottery Fund. Find out more about the Network
International Coalition of Sites of Conscience (ICSC) is the is the only worldwide network of Sites of Conscience. With over 350 members in 65 countries, it builds the capacity of these vital institutions through grants, networking, training, transitional justice mechanisms and advocacy. Its members and partners remember a variety of histor from a wide range of settings – including long-standing democracies, couies and comentries struggling with legacies of violence, as well as post-conflict regions just beginning to address their transitional justice needs – but they are all united by their common commitment to connect past to present, memory to action. Find out more about the ICSC
National Trust is committed to promoting and preserving places of natural beauty and historic interest. It cares for over 500 historic houses, castles, parks, and gardens; nearly one million works of art; and extensive areas of coastline and land. In doing so it maintains the highest standards of conservation, stewardship, and curatorial care for which it is internationally recognised. The Trust is also working to open up city landscapes with local communities and partners, to encourage nature back into urban areas. The National Trust seeks to make these places as accessible as possible for as many people as possible. Find out more about the National Trust