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DTSTART:20190331T010000
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DTSTART:20191027T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210427T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210427T150000
DTSTAMP:20260429T054515
CREATED:20210407T085849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210407T085950Z
UID:32550-1619532000-1619535600@www.knowledgequarter.london
SUMMARY:KQ Exhibition Professionals Meeting: Emotional Evaluation of Exhibitions
DESCRIPTION:Book tickets through Eventbrite here. \nKnowledge Quarter Exhibition Professionals Meeting: opportunities for collaboration for Covid Recovery \nJoin fellow KQ Archive professionals on the afternoon of 27th April for a virtual coffee where we will explore the theme of ‘Emotional Evaluations of Exhibitions’. We will be joined by Frances Jeens\, Director of Jewish Museum London\, who will share some of the work they’ve been doing on measuring emotional responses to exhibitions. We will also use the meeting to reflect on the last 12 months and how our organisations have responded to the various challenges.  \nEmotional Evaluation at Jewish Museum London  \nThree years ago the Jewish Museum London began a new method of evaluation based on the desire to measure the impact of their programmes through the emotional responses of visitors across all their experiences within the Museum. A pilot programme was launched to trial collecting statistical data on how the Museum emotionally interacts with its visitors\, which has since grown to both change the creation of their programmes and how they evaluate them. \nJoin the session to both see the results from the initial pilot project and to hear how this has impacted the Jewish Museum London’s work both before and during Covid-19 and their plans for reopening our Museum building. We’ll explore the idea of positive and negative emotions when experienced within the Museum and the idea of emotional hacking and empathy activation. \nAbout our Networks: \nOur Breakfast meet-ups give professionals working across the Knowledge Quarter the chance to keep up-to-date with all that is happening in the area\, as well as share tips and experience on what gets people through the door and engaging online. \nBreakfast meetings are relaxed\, friendly sessions; grab a coffee\, a pastry and join a table. We open proceedings with a handful of Lightning Talks from external organisations and from a selection of partners. \nCan’t attend but want to receive invitations to future private virtual views? Sign up to our updates here.
URL:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/event/kq-exhibition-professionals-meeting-emotional-evaluation-of-exhibitions/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Feature Event,Jewish Museum,KQ Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/JML-Emotional2.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200813T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200813T160000
DTSTAMP:20260429T054515
CREATED:20200804T125745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200804T125902Z
UID:20258-1597330800-1597334400@www.knowledgequarter.london
SUMMARY:KQ Virtual Private View: Your Legacy and Me with the Jewish Museum
DESCRIPTION:Sign up for this event via Eventbrite by clicking here. \n  \nDiscover the Jewish Museum London’s Exhibition Your Legacy and Me\, a creative project exploring the legacy of the Holocaust\, created by the Holocaust Educational Trust’s young ambassadors. \nFollowing a visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau and hearing first hand testimony from a Holocaust survivor\, the young ambassadors were tasked with ensuring the Holocaust is remembered for generations; sharing their experiences and defending the truth of the past. \nInspired by the overlay work at the Jewish Museum London’s recent Charlotte Salomon: Life? or Theatre? exhibition and responding to photographs of Holocaust Survivors Solly Irving\, Gerta Vrbova\, Jackie Young and Elsa Shamash\, the young ambassadors created thoughtful pieces of legacy art that consider the relevance of the Holocaust today. \nThese pieces were created over a two-day workshop hosted by the Jewish Museum London\, Jami\, Holocaust Educational Trust and Jackie Young. \nYour Legacy & Me Online Exhibition: \nhttps://jewishmuseum.org.uk/collections/online-collections/your-legacy-and-me/ \n\n  \n  \n\nShereen Hunte is a Learning Officer at the Jewish Museum London. As well as teaching school workshops to Primary and Secondary School students\, she leads on the museum’s Learning Placements and Black History Programme. For the past two years Shereen has coordinated the museum’s Takeover Exhibitions\, working alongside community partners and their young participants to create youth-led exhibitions\, including this year’s Your Legacy and Me Project in partnership with the Holocaust Education Trust and Jami. \nContact Details: shereen.hunte@jewishmuseum.org.uk \nPhilippa Carr is Jami’s Education Manager where she has the privilege to deliver a ground breaking programme of mental health education. Philippa’s background is as a dramatherapist working in NHS Adult Mental Health Services. She enjoys using her creativity both in her work and her own time\, taking part in the Your Legacy and Me project has been a wonderful opportunity to do this. @JamiPeople FB JAMIMentalHealth \nContact Details : philippa.carr@jamiuk.org \nThe Holocaust Educational Trust educates young people from every background\, across the UK\, about the Holocaust and the important lessons to be learned for today. One of the Trust’s earliest achievements was ensuring that the Holocaust formed part of the National Curriculum for History. To date\, over 41\,000 students and teachers have participated in the Holocaust Educational Trust’s ground-breaking Lessons from Auschwitz (LFA) Project. This four part project includes hearing the first hand testimony of a Holocaust survivor and visiting Auschwitz-Birkenau. When students return\, they become Ambassadors for the Trust\, and share what they have learnt with in their colleges and communities. \nThe Holocaust Educational Trust’s Ambassador Programme. Through this Programme\, the Trust is investing in the next generation\, providing opportunities for Ambassadors to further their historical knowledge and offering practical advice on how they can encourage others to join them in remembering the Holocaust. \n\n  \n\nOur Virtual Events:  \nOur virtual events are becoming increasingly popular and often completely sell out. To ensure you are able to join the event\, please ‘arrive’ (via the link sent through Eventbrite ) around 5 minutes before the start. This will ensure you are able to be let into the Zoom room before we reach full capacity. \nOnce you have signed up via Eventbrite you will receive a Zoom link by email 48 hrs before\, 2 hrs before and 10 minutes before the event\, please check your JUNK folder for these emails as they are sent directly through Eventbrite’s system. \nYou do not need to download Zoom software in order to participate – there is a web browser version which works perfectly well. \nIf you have any questions please get in touch with the KQ events team: Bhav or Jemima. \nCan’t attend but want to receive invitations to future private virtual views? Sign up to our updates here.
URL:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/event/kq-virtual-private-view-your-legacy-and-me-with-the-jewish-museum/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Jewish Museum,KQ Events,Private Views
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Elsa-Shamash-Isobel-Ducille-scaled-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190329
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191104
DTSTAMP:20260429T054515
CREATED:20190617T134601Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190617T134601Z
UID:17638-1553817600-1572825599@www.knowledgequarter.london
SUMMARY:Great British Jews: A Celebration
DESCRIPTION:Discover some of the most recognisable Great British inventions\, innovations\, products and people that you never knew were Jewish!\nThis playful exhibition celebrates the huge contribution that Jews have made to this country across a variety of cultural\, scientific and commercial fields. \nPlease note this event is currently running\, closing on the 3 November 2019. Find out more here. \nAbout The Jewish Museum London\nThe Jewish Museum London tells the story of the history and heritage of Jews in Britain through universal themes of migration\, family\, faith and culture. The Museum exists for all people from all backgrounds and celebrate diversity in all its forms.
URL:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/event/great-british-jews-a-celebration/
LOCATION:Jewish Museum\, Raymond Burton House\, 129-131 Albert St\, London\, Camden\, NW1 7NB
CATEGORIES:August,Feature Event,Jewish Museum,July,June,November,October,Partner Events,September
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Great-British-Jews-exh-2.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190319
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190708
DTSTAMP:20260429T054516
CREATED:20190228T110459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190228T175516Z
UID:15691-1552953600-1562543999@www.knowledgequarter.london
SUMMARY:Jews\, Money\, Myth at the Jewish Museum
DESCRIPTION:Jews\, Money\, Myth\, a major new exhibition at Jewish Museum London\, explores the role of money in Jewish life and its often vexed place in relations between Jews and non-Jews\, from the time of Jesus to the 21st century.\nReflecting on over 2\,000 years of history\, Jews\, Money\, Myth tells the story of an abiding antisemitic trope through manuscripts\, prints\, art\, film\, literature and cultural ephemera\, from board games and cartoons to costumes and figurines. These exhibition items\, drawn together from the museum’s collection and complemented by loans from Europe\, North America and Israel\, describe the various strands which have gone into the creation of a pervasive stereotype: the theological roots of the association of Jews with money; the myths and reality of the medieval Jewish moneylender; and the place of Jews – real and imagined – in commerce\, capitalism and finance up to the present day. \nThe exhibition shows how Jewish wealth and poverty have been created by circumstances rather than ‘Jewishness’ itself. Pushed into unpopular economic roles such as usury\, some Jews lent money for interest in the Medieval period; Jewish merchants and bankers were drawn to London in the mid-late Seventeenth Century; and tens of thousands came as poor economic migrants in the Eighteenth Century. They improvised a livelihood\, begging and peddling cheap goods in town and country. These contrasting roles gave rise to stereotypes that took hold of the public imagination and have shown remarkable longevity: two are easily recognisable in well-known literary characters such as Shakespeare’s money lender Shylock\, and Dickens’ Fagin who traded in stolen goods. \nJews\, Money\, Myth explores how stereotypes linking Jews with money and power evolved in different political contexts and have been exploited for different ends. The caricature of the powerful\, rich Jew continues to inform conspiracy theories and to recur in political propaganda\, cartoons\, artworks and on social media. With populism on the rise\, the exhibition comes at a critical point in history. \nRembrandt’s Judas Returning the Thirty Pieces of Silver (1629)\, on loan from a private collection\, is one highlight of the exhibition. The biblical story of Judas Iscariot’s betrayal of Jesus for 30 pieces of silver has a significant place in the history of anti-Jewish stereotypes until the present day. Other rare and early artworks spanning almost 500 years reveal a variety of malign interpretations of the story and shed light on relations between Christians and Jews. \nSpecially commissioned work by contemporary artists are a further feature of a fascinating and provocative exhibition. \n \nThe exhibition will run from 19 March until 7 July 2019 \nOpening Times: Daily 10am – 5pm (Friday: 10am – 2pm) \nThe exhibition has been developed in collaboration with the Pears Institute for the study of Antisemitism at Birkbeck\, University of London and is generously supported by the Art Fund.  \nImage: Nutcracker in shape of Fagin\, Birmingham\, 20th century. \nThe low socio-economic position of most Jews in England and their low-status jobs led to Jews being associated with criminality. Dicken’s creation of the notorious pickpocket Fagin reflected and reinforced negative stereotypes of Jewish greed and dishonesty that existed in Georgian England.\n© Jewish Museum London \n\n  \n 
URL:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/event/jews-money-myth-at-the-jewish-museum/
LOCATION:Jewish Museum\, Raymond Burton House\, 129-131 Albert St\, London\, Camden\, NW1 7NB
CATEGORIES:Jewish Museum,Partner Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.knowledgequarter.london/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Nutracker-in-shape-of-Fagin-detail-1-e1551376420281.jpg
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