National Volunteer Week 2022

To celebrate National Volunteer Week 2022 and to thank our volunteers for their continued dedication and commitment, Sydney Cultural Institutions are offering volunteers, a week of free tours and events.

To celebrate National Volunteer Week 2022 and to thank our hundreds of volunteers for their continued dedication and commitment, Sydney Cultural Institutions would like to offer you, our volunteers, a week of free tours and events.

National Volunteer Week Offers:

Bookings open 9am on Monday 9th May.
Unless otherwise indicated, all offers must be pre-booked using Eventbrite. 

Some of the great offers include:

    • Australian Museum First Nations galleries tour
    • Royal Botanic Garden Behind the Scenes Glasshouse Tour
    • Free Australian National Maritime Museum ‘See It All’ Ticket Entry
    • NSW National Parks & Wildlife Services South Head Tunnel Tour
    • NSW Rail Museum, Transport Heritage NSW Museum Entry only tickets 
    • Sydney Harbour Federation Trust Behind the Scenes – Restoring Cockatoo Island’s Maritime Heritage
    • State Library of New South Wales Map Rooms at the State Library of NSW tour
    • Taronga Zoo free entry
    • Sydney Living Museums free entry
    • and lots more!

You can view a PDF of the offers via the link or in the viewer below:

2022-National-Volunteers-Week-OFFERS

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Sizdehbedar 2 April

Sizdehbedar (Nature Day) will be held on 2 April (the 13th day of Nowrouz) to mark the end of the year’s Persian New Year festivities. Join Western Sydney’s Persian community at Powerhouse Ultimo to celebrate this special day. Listen to music played by Iranian-Australian DJ Allen, join in traditional backgammon competition, watch Persian films, hear traditional stories and enjoy Persian cuisine.

PROGRAM

Cafe
10:15am: National Anthem of Iran
10.20am: Welcome statement from the Powerhouse
10.25am: Short history of Sizdehbehdar by Dr. Mehrassa Farjad
10:30am-4:30pm: DJ Allen
11.00am: Hathor Dance Studio
10:30am-1pm: Egg painting workshop for kids and families
12:00pm: Sabzeh competition
1:00pm-2:00pm: Face painting for kids and families
2:30pm-3:30pm: Face painting for kids and families
4:30pm: Closing statement
10am-5pm: Haftsin table
10am-5pm: Persian cuisine in the cafe by Shila Kitchen
10am – 5pm: Kazakhstan display 

Micro Cars
1:30pm-3pm: Backgammon competitions

Textiles Centre
11:00am: Persian Storytelling
12:00am: Persian Storytelling

Kings Cinema
10:30am: Documentary and Experimental Film Centre, Nowrouz in Tajikistan documentary screening & Nowrouz Tehran’s Time
2:30pm: Persian Film Festival, A Hairy Tale

For all ages. This is a free, drop-in program; bookings are not essential.

Invisible Revealed: Technical Innovations

Visiting Research Fellows Talk

When: Wednesday, 30 March 2022, 3pm to 4:30pm

Where: Powerhouse Theatrette and MS Teams

Pocket watch, rose gold/glass, maker unknown, France, c.1810. Powerhouse Collection. Neutron tomography by Joseph Bevitt ANSTO 2021.

About this event

Invisible Revealed is an exhibition developed through a partnership between the Museum and the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) and the Expanded Perception and Interaction Centre (EPICentre) at UNSW.  Using ANSTO’s state-of-the-art neutron beam and synchrotron X-ray facilities combined with digital visualisation techniques, this exhibition shows some of the discoveries we have made including how to identify different makers of our samurai swords and how a 200-year-old pocket watch can play a waltz.

The exhibition also features digital 3D models of some of the collection objects, simulations, augmented reality and a digital reconstruction of the missing portions of a fragmentary carpet done with Artificial Intelligence. These aspects were completed by Research Fellow Tomasz Bednarz at EPICentre at UNSW.

Come join us to hear Joseph Bevitt from ANSTO and Powerhouse Visiting Research Fellow Tomasz Bednarz talk about some of the technical innovations that went in to the making of the Invisible Revealed.

Powerhouse Visiting Research Fellow and Associate Professor Tomasz Bednarz is a Director at the Expanded Perception & Interaction Centre (EPICentre) UNSW Art & Design. He is also a Team Leader at the CSIRO Data61 (leading Visual Analytics team, in Software & Computational Systems research program), and leads CSIRO’s Modelling & Simulation Cross-Cutting Capability, Future Science & Technology. His current roles reflect his conviction to a holistic approach to the wicked problems facing the collation, analytics and display of big data. His approach is expansive and encompasses the use of novel technologies such as Augmented Reality, Virtual Reality, CAVE, Dome, AVIE, often in combination. Over the last couple of years, he has been involved in wide range of projects in area of immersive visualisation, human-computer interaction, computational imaging, visualisation, and simulations, computational fluid dynamics, artificial intelligence, machine learning, computer graphics, and interactive techniques. He also has background in creative programming, demoscene and game development

Dr Joseph Bevitt is a senior instrument scientist on the Dingo radiograph/tomography/imaging station, and scientific coordinator for the Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering. Joseph is collaborating with both Australian and international museums and universities to pioneer the use of neutron and synchrotron X-ray microCT (3D imaging of objects using neutrons or X-rays with micrometre resolution) in the areas of palaeontology, archaeology and cultural heritage. Namely, to digitally excavate and reconstruct fossils without physical extraction from surrounding rock; to investigate disease and cultural practices revealed through mummified remains; and to determine methods of manufacturing ancient cultural artefacts. Joseph also engages with industry to achieve commercial applications of neutron tomography, including rapid neutron imaging techniques for time-resolved structural analysis of concrete, steel and other high-performance materials; and neutron irradiation for cancer therapy research.

Click here to join the meeting

Or call in (audio only): +61 2 9161 1229,,140768710#  

Phone Conference ID: 140 768 710#

Volunteer Voices: All Around the World

In this week’s blogpost, MDC Volunteer Alan Stennett focusses on the theme: All Around the World, incorporating the Powerhouse Collection and one single date…

On the theme of All around the world. I would like to talk about three significant anniversaries.  And a single date.
 
I’ll start with the most important one — my wife’s birthday.
 
On the 23rd of March two thousand and twenty my wife reached one of those milestones that deserves to be celebrated.
 
A trip around the world would not have been out of the question.
 
But on March 23 twenty twenty there was no chance of that. As you may recall, that very same day marked probably the biggest lockdown of the Covid pandemic. 
 
Joking that my wife’s  birthday had stopped the nation – like the Melbourne Cup – soon wore thin.
 
The border was shut. Our visit to the Hermitage was not going to happen.
 
It seemed the like the world when Smithy was flying.
 
So let’s move onto the the third anniversary, the 23rd of March…this year….2022.
 
PCRs and RATS have become part of our life. This anniversary celebrates a different kind of diagnostic tool to help guarantee our safety.
 
And maybe a reason to feel more optimistic about  travelling all around the world once more.
March 23 marks 60 years since the first and only in air test of the first fully functional Black Box flight data and cockpit voice recorder prototype.
 
These days recovering the Black Box after an air disaster to analyse its contents for the cause of the accident is a familiar concept.
 
In 1953 it was the revolutionary idea of Dr David Warren from Australia’s Aeronautical Research Laboratories, an expert fuel chemist who was brought in with a diverse group of other aviation experts to try and diagnose the unknown deadly failings that brought down the world’s first jet airliner the De Havilland Comet, not once but several times. 
 
There were thousands of pieces of potential physical evidence. But if only you could eavesdrop on the last minutes of a fatal flight a crucial clue could be revealed by the background sounds and the words of the crew in the cockpit. That seemed like a fantasy. 
 
Nine years and dozens of frustrating obstacles later it became a reality when a Civil Aviation Fokker Friendship took off from Essendon Airport on March 23 1962 to test the advanced pre-production prototype of the ARL Flight Recorder.
 
Of the team of David Warren and three ARL scientific staff who developed this prototype only Ken Fraser is still alive.
He was pleased to be reminded the anniversary was coming up. 
 
He commented “If I had to pick the most significant black box day for me that would be it.”
 
Interviewed about the test flight by author Janice Peterson Witham in the year 2000 Ken Fraser reminisced-
 
“It was one thing to get the unit to work perfectly on the bench in the lab, but quite another to actually install it on an aeroplane and get it going. Looking back over my career, the number of times something hasn’t gone wrong is practically negligible. Something always goes wrong the first time. But that test flight really went without a hitch. We got everything.”
 
That ‘everything’ comprised the cockpit voice recording filtered to guarantee audibility against loud background noise – the CVR – and the Flight Data Recorder which recorded 8 different flight data about the aircraft’s performance. All captured on fire proof stainless steel wire roughly the thickness of a human hair.
 
Perfecting it pushed the technology of the day to the limit.
 
Next step was in the hands of British firm S Davall and Sons who produced the rare Red Egg demonstration unit in the Museum’s collection.
 
The ARL Flight Recorder was a world first that came before its time. The team would wait almost forty years for the recognition they deserved.
 
In February 2001 the team was jointly awarded the Lawrence Hargrave Award granted by the Australian Division of The Royal Aeronautical Society. 
 
For two it was a posthumous award.
 
For David Warren, the originator and ever persistent promoter of this extraordinary safety device, history would finally catch up in a number ways with which he was recognised, including having a Qantas A380 and a Government building in Australia’s capital named after him.
 
Now….check the date on your passport, book a ticket to somewhere exciting and….relax.
 
If the worst comes to the worst, we’ll know exactly what happened…

Dr Sheldon’s New Discovery

Volunteer Judy shares her insights into Dr Sheldon and his “new discovery”

In this weeks briefing notes, we have been sharing a fascinating image of a Postcard, Advertising “Dr Sheldon’s New Discovery for Coughs and Colds. Judy C (curatorial volunteer) uncovered some more information about this product. 

“As far as I can determine, there was no ‘new discovery’ nor was there a Dr Sheldon. This was the name given to a pharmaceutical product extensively advertised from 1904. Various testamonials masquerading as letters to the syndicated newspapers promoted the product of which no ingredients were ever divulged. I hate to think what was actually in it as it was given to children with respiratory symptoms. Including alchohol perhaps to quieten then down?”

Read more about Dr Sheldon’s “new discovery”.