The Finnish Institute in London: Tale of Two Countries Celebrates Digital Cultural Heritage and Finnish-British Cultural Relations

The Institute's main partners in the project are The British Library, The National Archives of Finland, The National Library of Finland and several other archives. Other partners include The Yle Archives, The Päivälehti Archives, The Archives of President Urho Kekkonen and The Migration Institute of Finland. The gallery also includes material from The Guardian and Observer archives.
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LONDON, (informazione.it - comunicati stampa - arte e cultura)

The Institute's main partners in the project are The British Library, The National Archives of Finland, The National Library of Finland and several other archives. Other partners include The Yle Archives, The Päivälehti Archives, The Archives of President Urho Kekkonen and The Migration Institute of Finland. The gallery also includes material from The Guardian and Observer archives.

A Tale of Two Countries makes archives available to the public, collects digital cultural heritage and invites everyone to share their memories and stories as part of the gallery. The gallery also introduces a group of interesting Finnish and British individuals who live their lives in between the two cultures. The gallery is part of the official programme of the Finland 100 anniversary.

The gallery offers articles, images and both video and audio material. The material includes the story of Winston Churchill's father's fishing trips to Finland, how British ladies sent Jean Sibelius flowers - and the story of how punk travelled from the UK to Finland. The gallery also offers rare images of Queen Elizabeth strolling in a Finnish forest with President Urho Kekkonen 1976.

"Putting the gallery together has been a great collaborative effort between the Finnish Institute in London and Finnish and British archive and library professionals. The main aim of the project is to celebrate the Finnish centenary by emphasising the role of digital cultural heritage and the importance of collaboration and crowdsourcing along with strengthening international networks in this field," says the Head of the Society and Culture Programme at the Finnish Institute in London, Johanna Sumuvuori.

The gallery is open to public from 27 June 2017 onwards. The Finnish Institute in London invites everyone to view the articles and materials in the gallery as well as downloading their own stories and images onto the online portal - and become part of the Tale of the Two Countries.

Images here: http://bit.ly/2tg8GsB

The gallery can be found here:

http://www.taleoftwocountries.fi/

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