Commemorate Gallipoli 100 Years on This Anzac Day
MEDIA RELEASE
Wednesday 11 March,
2015
/
Commemorate Gallipoli 100 Years on This Anzac Day at Auckland War Memorial Museum
Auckland War Memorial Museum, in partnership with Auckland Council, will offer a commemorative Anzac Day programme marking the centenary of the Gallipoli Landings. In what will be a significant day as part of the First World War centenary, the Museum’s programme will offer a great opportunity for Aucklanders, New Zealanders and visitors alike to commemorate the occasion and pay their respects to those who have served.
“Extraordinary sacrifices during the First World War prompted what was then the Auckland province to construct a war memorial in 1929 to honour those who fell. While at the time the proposals to integrate the memorial with the Museum were controversial, the decision to create Auckland War Memorial Museum was far-sighted and honourable”, says Auckland War Memorial Museum Director, Roy Clare. “Today’s institution gains its strength from the consistent support of Aucklanders, and a century on from the Gallipoli landings, the Museum continues to be a vital focus for people wishing to learn about, commemorate and honour those who served.”
Sharing the banner of ‘He toa taumata rau: Courage has many resting places’, Auckland War Memorial Museum and Auckland Council’s WWI centenary programme takes a different thematic focus each year, the theme for the programme in 2015 is ‘Death of Innocence’.
Anzac Day
Free for all
on Saturday 25 April, the Museum’s Anzac Day programme
will begin following the Dawn Service. The programme will
include: Performances from Auckland Choral, Auckland Youth
Choir and Auckland Girls’ Choir and a performance by The
New Zealand Dance Company drawn from their acclaimed show
Rotunda. There will also be a talk by writer Gavin
Strawhan and director Peter Burger about their TVNZ drama
series When We Go to War, guided tours, poetry
readings, poppy making sessions, collection displays and
talks, diary readings and a screening of the Auckland
episode of the HISTORY Channel’s Tony Robinson’s Tour
of Duty.
Illuminate: When We Go To
War
Over four nights from Wednesday 22 April, in
the lead up to and on Anzac Day, the Museum will project
free ‘Illuminate’ film screenings onto its Northern
Façade. The specially created film will be taken from
TVNZ’s upcoming NZ on Air funded First World War drama
series, When We Go to War. The projections will also
include rarely seen photographs of New Zealanders at
Gallipoli from the Museum’s pictorial collections. These
images feature as part of the Museum’s soon to be
published book, The Anzacs: An inside view of New
Zealanders at Gallipoli (Penguin Random
House).
Gallipoli in Minecraft®
A new
exhibition opening on Friday 24 April, Gallipoli in
Minecraft®, will give families a chance to explore the
Gallipoli campaign through the immersive world of
Minecraft®. A popular online game, Minecraft® is about
breaking and placing blocks, since its inception players
have worked together to create a whole host of incredible
and imaginative worlds. Over the past year students from
Alfriston College in Auckland have been working in
collaboration with the Museum, utilising its First World War
collections, to re-create the landscape of Gallipoli in
1915. The exhibition will showcase the work of the students
alongside the collection items that inspired their efforts.
The virtual Minecraft® world will become available for
download on Anzac Day.
Online
Cenotaph
A gathering point for the personal and
official memory of New Zealand’s servicemen and women,
Online Cenotaph has recently been redeveloped in
collaboration with the Ministry for Culture and Heritage,
with new content contributed by Auckland Libraries. The
updated site contains new and enhanced features such as the
ability for public to add information, photographs and
documents into personal records and also honour individuals
by laying digital poppies. From Anzac Day, thanks to funding
from the Lottery Grants Board, an outreach programme
featuring a specially designed mobile unit will be visiting
events within the Auckland region. He Pou Aroha
–Community Cenotaph will give communities the
opportunity to locate and add to records, digitise personal
items and contribute to the Online Cenotaph
database.
“Anzac Day brings communities together to remember those who served for New Zealand at Gallipoli and in other conflicts”, says Auckland Museum’s Director of Public Engagement and Capital Projects, Sally Manuireva. “From our new exhibition, Gallipoli in Minecraft®, through to our ‘Illuminate’ screenings, packed offering on Anzac Day, and He Pou Aroha –Community Cenotaph programme, the Museum will give visitors a chance to learn about the Gallipoli campaign and First World War 100 years on, remembering the bravery and commitment shown by those who served at home and abroad.”
###
AWMM_WWICentenary_April_May2015.pdf