This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. By clicking or navigating the site you agree to allow our collection of information through cookies. Check our Privacy policy.
Rounding out our series on digital storytelling, Gregory Markus, Project Leader at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, lets us listen in on their latest projects. Via the RE:VIVE initiative, they’re reusing cultural heritage material to make electronic music that brings sounds and memories of the past to current audiences.
At Rewire Festival in The Hague on March 29th, the Instrumental Shifts Symposium, organised by The Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision’s RE:VIVE initiative explored the intersections of AI R&D related to music and its impact on the creative sector. EuropeanaTech community manager and RE:VIVE founder, Gregory Markus, wears both of his hats and explains why these meetings are so valuable for both ends of the spectrum.
Are you interested in the unusual and complex jobs in digital cultural heritage? So are we, so each month we are going to take a deep-dive into the work of professionals in the sector. This month we speak with newly elected Members Councillor Henk Alkemade on the importance of immersive cultural heritage and the challenge of showing its value outside of the financial.
News
Created: 26 October 2018
Rasa Bocyte
Aleksandra Strzelichowska
GIFs have become an important means of creation and communication in our digital society. Brigitte Jansen and Rasa Bočytė from the Dutch Institute for Sound and Vision see GIFs as part of our cultural heritage that needs to be preserved for future generations.
Title:
Martijn Kleppe, photo by Jos Uljee, Koninklijke Bibliotheek/National Library of the Netherlands.
Creator:
Jos Uljee
Date:
2017
Institution:
Koninklijke Bibliotheek/National Library of the Netherlands
As part of our 'open culture' blog mini-series, we talk to Martijn Kleppe, advisor for Digital Scholarship & International Relations at the National Library of the Netherlands.