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Friday, 6 October 2017


Family Open Day - 24th August 2107







The Family open day at Bexhill Museum was a great success. Over 100 people came throughout the day and had fun joining in the activities and looking around the museum and POP exhibition whilst trying to solve the specially devised trail quiz.
























Bexhill Museum would like to thank all the members of public who play the National Lottery which raises funds for projects such as People-Object-Place to take place.
 




Monday, 14 August 2017









   All POP Project Exhibits are on display at Bexhill Museum until 
   17th December 2017.

   www.bexhillmuseum.co.uk








 


    





                                                                                            








































                             www.bexhillmuseum.co.uk


Wednesday, 12 July 2017


















Kings German Legion - Hanoverian Refugees, Photographic composite,                 
Rebecca Helbick 2017




Refugee Timeline, Dawn Monk, 2017





In Their Own Words, Members of etc sussex share their story for the POP Project giving a valuable insight to the struggles endured by those seeking a better life.

Recorded at etc sussex, Hastings, 
Formatted by Donna-Lee Seymour & Dawn Monk, 2017









Thursday, 29 June 2017

Coming soon.... Migration for Safety









POP at DLWP













Acrylic Screen print on steel sheet by Laura Asselborn and Donna-Lee Seymour. Content research by Sue McLean






























Hope....for tomorrow   A story of migrating to Great Britain in search of a better future. Interviewed at etc Sussex, Hastings, 2017



Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Oral Histories



The POP project was invited to ETC Sussex in March to talk to their group members.

Education Training Consortium Sussex (etc sussex) was formed in 2008 to meet the training and education needs of people from marginalised communities. Amongst their great work they run English, Maths and IT classes for people whose first language is not English and offer support to help encourage integration into the community.











We were welcomed wholeheartedly into their class and were privileged to have been shared some personal histories of contemporary migration to Sussex. These recorded conversations gave a valuable insight to the struggles endured by those seeking a better life and the joy, hope and success it can bring. These collected oral histories form our heritage of today and will be archived for future generations to access.

Monday, 26 June 2017

Migration for Work

Migration for Work focused on people who had moved to the U.K and to the region and made a contribution to the development of the area.

The students were introduced to archive material relating to a Roman Empire iron works situated in the Hastings area. The site was under the control of Classis Britannica, the provincial navel fleet of ancient Rome. Part of this archive in the stored collected at Bexhill Museum are the excavated remains of a bath house from the site.  Along with clay tiles, the remains include “opus caementicium”, Roman concrete, a new technology migrated to Britain.

This material inspired the project group to compare the lives of three people who worked extensively in concrete material and built significant structures in the region and left enduring legacies.





 












Laura Asselborn and Donna-Lee Seymour screen printing at Sussex Coast College Hastings, School of Art and Design.