CultureMoves is a Europeana Generic Services project, with a team consisting of IN2 Digital Innovation, Fondazione Sistema Toscana, Universidade Nova de Lisboa and Coventry University. It supports the development of new forms of tourist engagement, educational resources and dance research by leveraging and promoting content from Europeana. 

The project’s tools include MovesCollect, a Chrome browser extension which allows you to create bookmarks and save your favourite items while browsing Europeana Collections. Additionally, the MovesScrapbook tool allows you to organise this saved content and mix it with your own, creating scrapbooks that can be used for storytelling, inspiration and much more.  

Paying attention to the leading role video is playing in the content revolution, CultureMoves has also produced MotionNotes, a web-based video annotator designed for dancers and choreographers. All tools are accessible on our dedicated portal and tutorials are posted on their Youtube channel.  

 

Promoting destinations with generative art

CultureMoves works to push the boundaries of creative content reuse. Their Dance (Algo)rhythms video installation is an example of one of the innovative ways they promote destinations through generative art. Generative art uses programmed algorithms and artificial intelligence to handle cultural heritage content and create artworks, which we then use as the interactive set of dance performances. They presented Dance (Algo)rhythms during Internet Festival 2019, one of the main events in Italy dedicated to the Internet and digital technologies. You can read about other examples of employing dance for touristic promotion in their report.

Nicola Gronchi | 11 Oct 2019  | Internet Festival / Fondazione Sistema Toscana


LabDays and events

In 2019 they also organised the ‘Moving Culture’ Conference in Pisa on the topic of new forms of creative engagement and art. The conference included reputed speakers from around Europe, including Pep Gatell of La Fura dels Baus / Epica Foundation, an organisation which has experimented with the integration between arts and digital technologies since 1980.

In the research and educational context, they have also organised several LabDays, which are interdisciplinary workshops bringing together students from various disciplines (such as architecture), artists, researchers, dance educators and technologists. The LabDays tackled topics including the relationships between dance, public spaces and tourism. Due to the positive feedback and exciting outcomes, they encourage others to take up this approach and have published a ‘LabDay toolkit’.  


Maria Polodeanu | 30 September 2019 | Coventry University (CDaRE)

You can read the full article here & More information about CultureMoves can be found here.