Five digital narratives with guide objects from the Portal of the Digital Collections of Mobile Monuments The same objects could tell different stories, as many as there are narrators interested in telling them.
Take a tour of the Archive and the exhibition on the History of the Archaeological Service with the help of technology.
As part of the complex project to restore and reopen the former royal estate of Tatoi, the Directorate for the Curation of the National Monuments Archive undertook the recording and digitisation of the objects found on the premises. The film presents the personal perspective of the cataloguers on the objects they recorded and the way they approached objects associated with people and events in modern Greek history.
Learn about the cataloguing of objects carried out at the former royal estate of Tatoi. The film follows the documenters and presents the working methods of the specialised team of cataloguers employed in the project of documenting the material at Tatoi.
Share the film created in 2022 to promote the ‘Archaeological Land Registry’ project to the general public.
Watch the film created as part of the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Convention for the Protection of Cultural and Natural Heritage at the European Centre in Delphi in November 2022. Learn how the protection and preservation of cultural heritage, both tangible and intangible, contributes to the achievement of all 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Learn more about the objectives of the ‘Archaeological Cadastre’ project from the film screened in 2021 at the Conference for the completion of the eponymous Act.
Symbiosis
DCNAM, as part of the exhibition ‘The Next 50: Cultural Heritage for Sustainability’ designed and implemented for the UNESCO conference “The Next 50 – The future of World Heritage in challenging times: enhancing resilience and sustainability” in Delphi (17-18 November 2023), a video on the coexistence of living beings and their interdependence with the natural environment. The protagonists are objects – exhibits from Greek archaeological museums. Witnesses to the knowledge of the society that created them, from the Neolithic to more recent times, they describe a way of life in harmony with nature, inspired by it and, above all, respectful and caring towards it.