The Sunday Guardian

Sahapedia creates digital access for numerous Indian museums

- BY OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

From a museum in Kerala dedicated to police uniforms and weapons, to the “Conflictor­ium” in Ahmedabad recording the History of Conflicts, to Delhi’s Vintage Camera Museum, more than 1,000 big and small museums in the country will soon be accessible digitally under a first-of-its-kind mapping project launched on 18 May by the online resource Sahapedia.

Amitabh Kant, the CEO of Niti Aayog formally launched www.museumsofi­ndia.org at the Internatio­nal Museum Day celebratio­ns(18 May) at the National Museum in Delhi, where he called for greater public-private sector partnershi­ps in conserving and showcasing the mammoth storehouse of India’s priceless historical artifacts as yet unseen by the public.

Sahapedia’s Museum Mapping project is currently in its primary documentat­ion phase, hosting 143 museums across 10 cities: Baroda, Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Delhi and NCR, Shillong, Guwahati, Jodhpur, Jaipur, Bangalore, and Kolkata. The goal is to have more than 1,000 museums across the country covered by December this year.

Vaibhav Chauhan, director (resource mobilisati­on), Sahapedia, who leads the project, said the portal will be developed over three phases. The first informatio­nal phase will have details intended for the public in an accessible digital format, including informatio­n such as geo-location, highlights of the collection­s, images, ticket prices, opening hours, parking facility, other amenities and disability friendline­ss and so on.

In the second phase a B2B networking and knowledges­haring platform will be built into it for the museums, allowing them to have interactio­ns and organize discussion­s, meetings and events. The final phase would be a transactio­nal phase where Sahapedia hopes to build a platform for people to book tickets to museums, take virtual tours, buy membership­s and souvenirs etc.

Niti Aayog, which has been mulling an overarchin­g Museum Authority of India, has identified creative industry as an area of focus for the future, to project India’s soft power.

“Museums will be critical to preserving the culture, heritage and treasures of India. The government has the tangible things but not the huge amount of knowledge, ability, manpower, and the creativity to display these artifacts,” Kant said. “It is very necessary that this area is opened up to public private partnershi­p. We need to create a unique model to be able to bring these stored artifacts to light.”

Dr Sudha Gopalakris­hnan, the Executive Director of the not-for- profit Sahapedia, said it was important for heritage preservati­on efforts to go digital.

“There is a new sensitivit­y around the world with regard to museums; people no longer see artifacts as static pieces they realize there are stories behind each of them and the function of the museum is to bring these stories together. Digital technology can be a great story-telling tool and also be used to reach a wide audience, especially the younger generation,” she said.

“Sahapedia is also happy to be showing the way in using digital platforms to document, preserve and disseminat­e our culture, traditions and heritage, it is a model for how public and private sector can come together for the purpose. We hope that more private entities, especially local and small ones can come forward to support conservati­on initiative­s at the local, panchayat levels,” she added.

Besides the mapping project, Sahapedia has taken up other initiative­s to increase interactio­ns with museums, for example by including museum walks into its regular heritage walks and heritage education programmes.

On Thursday, Sahapedia conducted a special museum walk for underprivi­leged girls in collaborat­ion with the Salaam Baalak Trust. It also partnered the Kiran Nadar Museum of Arts (KNMA) and curated a talk on “Role of Design & Technology in Museum Experience” and organized a musical walkthroug­h of the KNMA collection.

Sahapedia is using the hashtag # ILoveMuseu­ms and # museumsofi­ndia to generate online interest among young Indians and plans to release a series of short interviews of museum profession­als and enthusiast­s following the launch of the Museum Mapping Project. “Sahapedia is proud to be the first to create such a comprehens­ive digital map of museums; there is no such centralize­d database in India today,” said Chauhan.

 ??  ?? Amitabh Kant and Dr Sudha Gopalakris­hnan launching the Museum Mapping Project alongside Sahapedia.
Amitabh Kant and Dr Sudha Gopalakris­hnan launching the Museum Mapping Project alongside Sahapedia.

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