Antwerp Cultural Heritage Sciences

Antwerp Cultural Heritage Sciences Antwerp Cultural Heritage Sciences: Building bridges between various scientific fields to improve the conservation of heritage.

Every year, we award a prize for the best cross-sectional micrograph of the Optical Microscopy for Heritage Materials co...
12/06/2026

Every year, we award a prize for the best cross-sectional micrograph of the Optical Microscopy for Heritage Materials course in the Conservation and Restoration program.
This year, the winner is student Hannah Lauwers.
Congratulations!
A cross-sectional image is an excellent tool for conservators and restorers who want to gain more information about the objects and materials they work with.
In this course, students have the opportunity to complete all the steps to obtain a cross-sectional micrograph, from the best way to collect a sample, through embedding, cutting, sanding, polishing, and documentation.
In her image, we can see a cross-section micrograph of a sample taken from a painting, revealing its distinct pictorial layers, which allows us to study the materiality of the object and the artist's technique.
The prize is a headband magnifier.

Last year's master student Maarten Van Kerckhoven presented his thesis research  during the CHEM-CH 2026 conference in B...
12/06/2026

Last year's master student Maarten Van Kerckhoven presented his thesis research during the CHEM-CH 2026 conference in Bled, Slovenia, (with his proud promotor Geert Van der Snickt in the room). His talk addressed the unexpected findings by MA-XRF and MA-XRPD on a 15th c. double Portrait by the Master of Frankfurt, a protected Flemish Masterpiece in the KMSKA. The paper will follow soon.

Last week, the third annual workshop took place of the 'Heritage Practice Communities in a Digitized World' Scientific R...
05/06/2026

Last week, the third annual workshop took place of the 'Heritage Practice Communities in a Digitized World' Scientific Research Network, led by ARCHES, took place hosted by Swansea University in Wales. The workshop focused on ongoing and developing research around Heritage Practice Communities, with special attention to the work of early career researchers. Taking part from ARCHES were Sofie De Ruysser, Nikolai Debono, Katelijne Nolet, Suzie Thomas and June Zhang. June also gave a wonderful public lecture as part of the programme, hosted by Urban HQ in central Swansea. We were joined by scholars from six different research groups across Flanders and Europe, as well as local heritage volunteers from nearby Port Talbot. We had a truly enriching workshop, and extend our thanks to all the participants and especially our Swansea colleague Dr Hilary Orange for such fantastic organisation.

On Tuesday 2 and Wednesday 3 June, ARCHES member Suzie Thomas took part in the third annual European Public Finds Record...
05/06/2026

On Tuesday 2 and Wednesday 3 June, ARCHES member Suzie Thomas took part in the third annual European Public Finds Recording Network (EPFRN) conference and business meeting, which this year was co-organised with the Portable Antiquities Scheme and the British Museum. The conference day was sponsored and hosted by the Society of Antiquaries of London, who provided the beautiful venue of Burlington House. The business meeting took place at the British Museum. Suzie is a founding member of EPFRN, a network which has enabled research collaborations and sharing of good practice around managing and recording archaeological finds made by the public (especially metal-detectorists), and has led to better understanding the heritage and social values around public interactions with archaeological objects. The EPFRN currently includes members from some 14 European countries.

Last week, ARCHES member Moniek Driesse travelled to Trondheim for a gathering, hosted by NTNU, with researchers and pra...
01/06/2026

Last week, ARCHES member Moniek Driesse travelled to Trondheim for a gathering, hosted by NTNU, with researchers and practitioners from architecture, urban planning, geography, design, psychology, disaster studies, heritage, and engineering. What brought them together was a shared set of concerns: to speculate, and to question practices that concentrate power, silence other knowledges, and reduce the world to what institutions can manage. Together with Mrudhula Koshy and Bruna Rohling, Moniek co-facilitated the workshop "Knots that Knot Knots": an experimental hour of movement and more-than-human storytelling.

This gathering was part of the collective book "Futures We Can Still Choose", still taking shape, which is transdisciplinary, decolonial, and speculative in its ambitions. It works across spatial scales, from the everyday to the long term, with an ethics of care and relationality. Including heritage as a living site where dominant stories can be questioned and other ways of knowing can surface.

Moniek contributes to a chapter that asks what happens when we read the inherited grammars of universal global urban policy against their own grain, through more-than-human, pluriversal, and feminist-speculative lenses. We argue that the words we inherit for thinking about cities, heritage, risk, and resilience are not neutral tools — they can be sedimentations of particular worldviews, distributing agency to some and not others. So, in this chapter, we purposefully misread them. We knot and interweave them differently, to let other worlds in.

We will share more as the book finds its shape.

Call for PhD Position: The Department of Heritage in the Faculty of Design Sciences is looking for a full-time (100%) do...
01/06/2026

Call for PhD Position:
The Department of Heritage in the Faculty of Design Sciences is looking for a full-time (100%) doctoral scholarship holder in the field of Built Heritage Studies. For more information, please visit the link below 👇:

YUFE vacancies

Exciting news! We're thrilled to share that Moniek Driesse has been awarded an FWO Postdoctoral Fellowship, extending he...
29/05/2026

Exciting news! We're thrilled to share that Moniek Driesse has been awarded an FWO Postdoctoral Fellowship, extending her stay at ARCHES through 2029.

Her project, ELEMENTAL, explores subterranean waterways in southeast Mexico as living, memory-bearing infrastructures under pressure from the Maya Train megaproject. Working at the crossroads of critical heritage studies, environmental humanities, and practice-based research, Moniek will develop 'elemental heritage' as both a conceptual lens and methodological framework — in close collaboration with local communities, underwater archaeologists, artists, and environmental rights advocates. (Photo: Valentina Cucchiara)

Please note that this lecture has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances. We apologise for any inconvenience cau...
20/05/2026

Please note that this lecture has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances.
We apologise for any inconvenience caused, especially to those who were planning to attend.

Last week, ARCHES member Gerrit Verhoeven was present at the ICA workshop "Archives and Tourism" at Lloret de Mar. He pr...
18/05/2026

Last week, ARCHES member Gerrit Verhoeven was present at the ICA workshop "Archives and Tourism" at Lloret de Mar. He presented a paper on "Chipping beauty. Hotel China in the archives of the Brussels porcelain manufacture Demeuldre-Coché (ca. 1890-1940)". With participants from Spain, France, Switzerland, Sweden, Belgium, and many other European countries, it was a resounding success. More information on the papers and the programme can be found on: https://www.arxiusiturisme.org/en

On Wednesday, 20 May, ARCHES member Suzie Thomas is presenting alongside Prof Laura McAtackney (University College Cork)...
15/05/2026

On Wednesday, 20 May, ARCHES member Suzie Thomas is presenting alongside Prof Laura McAtackney (University College Cork) in the 'Forgetting, Disappearance, and Material Loss' workshop at the Center for Theoretical Study, Charles University, Prague. The event takes place through the 'The Land Gone Wild' transdisciplinary project

Title Code of the project Provider Solution period Primary researcher Researcher from the IAP The Land Gone Wild. Archaeological and Transdisciplinary Research on Resilience Strategies in the 20th Century CZ.02.01.01/00/23_025/0008705 Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports 2025-2028 IAP Mgr. Jan Ha...

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