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Europeana 2025 offered thought-provoking debates, friendly faces and the inspiring POLIN Museum setting. It also tackled one key topic: funding. Because while ideas need imagination, they also need fuel to go far. Maciej Hofman looks back on Europeana 2025 and highlights five key things to keep in mind when looking to fund digital cultural heritage projects and initiatives.
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Children experience Time Odyssey at the British Museum. In Copyright.
Learn how the ‘Time Odyssey’ initiative from Art Explora is helping children throughout the UK to access museums through immersive digital storytelling.
Extended Reality (XR) is changing how we explore heritage and transforming cultural experiences. Thanks to immersive technologies, museums and heritage sites can create more engaging, inclusive and memorable visits. Explore the different forms of XR - and what they can do for you.
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Jahrbuch für Kulturpolitik 2023/24 Kultur(en) der Digitalität. CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0.
Europeana Foundation was delighted to contribute to the Yearbook for Cultural Policy’s edition on Culture(s) of Digitality. Access our paper, ‘Towards a heritage-led triple transition in Europe: Europeana and the common European data space for cultural heritage.’
We were delighted to welcome 600 cultural heritage professionals from over 60 countries to Europeana 2025 - Preserve, Protect, Reuse. Discover the key takeaways from the conference and how you can access its recordings.
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Sarah Buxton and Megan Bishop outside the Charlotte Museum. In Copyright.
Museum Director Sarah Buxton tells us about the Charlotte Museum Te Whare Takatāpui-Wāhine o Aotearoa, a unique cultural heritage institution believed to be the world’s only Lesbian Sapphic museum.