Sharing Stories on Contested Histories brings together young professionals working in museums and collection-managing organisations from around the world. Through the exchange of knowledge, experiences, and working practices, we seek to answer the questions below: 

  • How are we - museum professionals around the world - dealing with colonial collections? 
  • How do we critically engage with the museum's own histories and reflect on their role in society in the face of these histories?
  • How can we handle collections collected during colonial times in more caring and ethical ways?
  • How do we navigate and respond to contestations over histories and heritage?

Image: Remco Vermeulen

The participants of Sharing Stories on Contested Histories edition 2025 doing a morning session to kick-off the day

About the programme

The programme will explore topics including provenance research, restitution, collaboration with communities of origin, care, representation, exhibiting and design, and educational and public programming. It is designed to help you understand and work with contested histories - particularly those related to contemporary injustice. We focus on coloniality, given its global scope and ongoing impact.

With an emphasis on building relationships and trust, the programme supports the development of accesible, inclusive, and caring practices. We encourage participants to reflect on personal and institutional positionalities and to imagine new ways of working. To support this, you will be asked to contribute a real-life case study from your own practice as the basis for this shared exploration.

Learning with your global peers working in different contexts can generate fresh insights, strengthen understanding of entangled histories, and foster more equitable and durable professional relationships. Real case studies from your own practices will be the basis for shared exploration.

Image: Remco Vermeulen

The participants of the public World Café event, part of the Sharing Stories on Contested Histories 2025 programme

Programme approach and format

The programme consists of online sessions spread over four weeks and a weeklong onsite programme in the Netherlands.

How to apply

Interested to join this year's edition of Sharing Stories on Contested Histories? You can find more information about the selection criteria and the application process below.

The programme is limited to a maximum of 20 participants. Apply via the Apply Button below. You will be asked to submit a motivation letter (maximum 500 words) and a short biography (maximum 300 words) by Thursday 28 May 13:00 CET.

Apply

About the organising team

This programme is put together and facilitated by:

Image: Fiona Asokacitta

Fiona Asokacitta is an Indonesian PhD student in Anthropology at the University of Oxford researching British museum collections of Indonesian kerises, a traditional dagger originating from Java. She is also a volunteer with the British Museum's Southeast Asian collection, documenting and researching the Raffles collection of Indonesian objects, and an Editorial Assistant with the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. Fiona's research background focusses on contentious museum displays of Indonesian history. Fiona is an alumnus of Sharing Stories on Contested Histories 2024.

Image: Asmara Pelupessy

Asmara Pelupessy is a Bay Area, California-bred and Amsterdam-based cultural worker with decolonial ambitions. She works part-time as a researcher and project lead for the Research Group Cultural Heritage at the Reinwardt Academy (Amsterdam University of Arts), and full time as a mom. Asmara has worked in and across photography, contemporary art, media, education and heritage. In 2011 she co-edited the book UNFIXED: Photography and Postcolonial Perspectives in Contemporary Art. Lately her work engages contemporary makers, inclusion and policy.

Image: Ruben Smit

Ruben Smit is senior lecturer, researcher and programme lead International Knowledge Exchange Initiatives. He has been lecturing for the last two decades at the Reinwardt Academy and has previously held several managerial functions in the museum sector. In his capacity as senior trainer, he has a long-standing experience with work in countries including China, Indonesia, Morocco and Russia. His main professional interests are focused on: audience development and participation, museum exhibiting and interpretation, learning and education, and international knowledge sharing.

Image: Remco Vermeulen

Remco Vermeulen is senior advisor for inter­national cooperation on collection management at the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands, working on knowledge exchange and capacity building pro­grammes in the context of the Inter­national Heritage Cooperation programme as well as for the Con­sor­tium Colonial Collections. Remco is also an external PhD candidate at the Erasmus School of Social and Behaviourial Sciences. His research focus on colonial heritage engagement, particularly by young people, in postcolonial Indonesian cities.

FAQ: Sharing Stories on Contested Histories edition 2026