janeheloise.wordpress.com
Featured online | Dr Jane-Héloïse Nancarrow
https://janeheloise.wordpress.com/features
A range of guest blog posts on various aspects of Jane-Heloise’s research, academic interests and recent projects. Please feel free to click through to the original posts:. Emotions in 3D: Digital modeling at the museum. 15th April, 2016. Featured on ‘Histories of Emotion’, the official blogroll of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (1100-1800), and was one of the most popular posts for 2016. How VR apps are made. Stonemasonry: A Day in the Life. Fill in your...
janeheloise.wordpress.com
Dr Jane-Héloïse Nancarrow | Researcher in medieval architecture, 3D visualisation for museums and cultural heritage, re-use and spolia, twelfth-century literature | Page 2
https://janeheloise.wordpress.com/page/2
Dr Jane-Heloise Nancarrow is an interdisciplinary, early-career researcher based at the University of Western Australia (UWA). She has additional affiliations with the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York, and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (1100-1800). She is currently working as a Digital Arts Project Officer in collaboration with the Cultural Precinct at UWA. Jane-Heloise completed her doctorate in medieval archaology and literature at the U...
janeheloise.wordpress.com
Ruinlust | Dr Jane-Héloïse Nancarrow
https://janeheloise.wordpress.com/2014/09/29/ruinlust
Following Medievalist.net’s recent post on the “Top 10 Medieval Ruins in England”, which can be found here:. Http:/ www.medievalists.net/2014/09/28/top-10-medieval-ruins-england/. I’d like to add my own two-cents’ worth of ruin-lust, which primarily centres on the North of England. Everyone loves a good ruin, and luckily English history (particularly the Civil War) is able to provide us with no shortage of them. Http:/ www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/ruin-lust. For now, while I love Whit...
janeheloise.wordpress.com
Stonemasonry: A day in the life | Dr Jane-Héloïse Nancarrow
https://janeheloise.wordpress.com/2015/04/29/stonemasonry-a-day-in-the-life
Stonemasonry: A day in the life. I have always wanted to know what it feels like to pick up chisel and mallet and create stone carvings like a medieval mason. Fortunately, a few weeks ago I took a long-overdue stonemasonry course which allowed me to indulge this passion for all things practical and petrological. Foliate head takes form. In particular, though we worked a man-made stone, it was easy to see how porosity, texture and mineral composition would invariably lead to different purposes and outcome...
SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT