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Kids2PHILADELPHIA, PA—Penn Museum's Summer Wonder series returns this season with a stellar lineup of performances and demonstrations that are perfect for the whole family. This weekly program offers an opportunity to enjoy international music, learn traditional Aztec dance, hear stories about the ancient Maya, and much more!

Summer Wonder programs run Wednesday mornings from June 20 through August 8, from 10:30 to 11:30 am, with the exception of July 4. The programs are free with Museum admission donation.

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Julian Siggers.Julian Siggers has been appointed the Williams Director of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, effective July 1, 2012

The announcement was made April 26 by Penn President Amy Gutmann and Provost Vincent Price. 

Siggers is currently vice president for programs, education and content communication at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada’s largest research museum.  He has also served as director of the Institute for Contemporary Culture at the Royal Ontario Museum and as head of narrative and broadcast development at the United Kingdom’s National Museum of Science and Industry in London.  Siggers taught prehistoric archaeology for eight years at the University of Toronto, where he earned his Ph.D., with a specialization in Near Eastern prehistoric archaeology. 

“As we celebrate the Penn Museum’s 125th anniversary, Julian Siggers is the perfect director to lead the nation’s finest university archeological museum,” Gutmann said.  “Julian is deeply committed to the Museum’s essential missions of research, teaching and public outreach and engagement.  In addition, he has extensive experience with museum stewardship and growth.

“Julian is taking the helm at a time when the sterling reputation of the Penn Museum continues to grow with last year’s ‘Secrets of the Silk Road’ exhibit and the spectacular 30th anniversary Maya Weekend just around the corner. ”

Throughout his career, Siggers has been a pioneer in advancing public engagement with museums and archaeology. 

At the Royal Ontario Museum, he developed innovative initiatives designed to make it a vital part of contemporary life and an inviting means of public education and discovery.  He pursued new forms of exhibition, publication, programming, broadcasting and digital media, including partnerships with government agencies and a weekly show on the Discovery Channel, and he directed a Dead Sea Scrolls project that drew the museum’s highest attendance in two decades.  He was also an integral part of the team responsible for fundraising initiatives, especially during a highly successful $300 million capital campaign.

“Julian Siggers is one of the world’s leading figures in enhancing the vitality of museums and charting the future of museum practice,” Price said.  “A committed scholar of prehistoric archaeology, he understands the importance of working collaboratively with faculty and scholars while expanding the reach of their work to new and non-traditional audiences.  I am confident that he will be a galvanizing force for advancing the Penn Museum across our campus, our city and state and beyond.” 

In addition to his 1997 doctorate from the University of Toronto, Siggers earned an M.A. in prehistoric archaeology in 1988 and B.A. with honors in archaeology in 1986 from the Institute of Archaeology at University College London. 

“As we welcome Julian,” Price said, “we also express our gratitude to Richard Hodges for his dynamic leadership of the Museum over the past five years, and we wish him well in his new position as president of the American University of Rome.” 

Penn Museum Visitor Services is hiring temporary staff for the duration of our MAYA 2012: Lords of Time exhibition. These staff members will play a key part in day-to-day operation of the special exhibition and the museum. Applicants must be dynamic friendly, with an interest in art, history, and/or museum fields.

Essential Duties

  • Provide outstanding customer service to all internal and external guests
  • Conduct sales at the admission desks and on the telephone
  • Answer telephones and respond to information requests
  • Promote museum memberships sales
  • Perform other duties as necessary

Contact
Conor Hepp, Director of Visitor Services
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Penn Museum is a core collaborator of the second annual Philadelphia Science Festival!

PSF LogowebThe citywide Philadelphia Science Festival runs April 20 to 29, 2012, and showcases the impact of science and technology past, present, and future. Part of a national movement to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers, the Festival builds on Philadelphia's own rich history of innovation with a wealth of free lectures, debates, hands-on activities, special exhibits and other informal learning experiences at museums, libraries, and even street corners and concert halls. More than 100 institutions led by The Franklin Institute support the Festival, funded in part by the National Science Foundation and presented by The Dow Chemical Company.

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Duffy’s Cut: Skeletal Remains of Irish Immigrants from 1832 Leave Penn Museum

Once-Forgotten Irish Immigrants Are Laid to Rest In West Laurel Hill Cemetery

Skeletal Remains from Duffy's CutThe long saga of Duffy’s Cut and the Irish immigrants who died there comes to a close—at least for the six individuals who were excavated from a mass gravesite in Malvern, PA.

In June, 1832, a group of 57 Irish immigrants from Donegal, Tyrone, and Derry arrived in Philadelphia. They were brought to Chester County by a fellow Irishman named Philip Duffy as laborers for the construction of the Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad, Pennsylvania’s pioneering railroad. Within six weeks, all were dead of cholera and possibly violence, and were buried anonymously in a ditch outside of Malvern.

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“Living Deliberately” Students and Professor Visit the Penn Museum

Students in Asian storageEleven Asian texts were carefully arranged on a large table, catalogue cards by each, when the University of Pennsylvania students came in to the Asian section storage room at the Penn Museum. The materials were diverse and intriguing: a Tibetan sutra rendered in gold leaf lettering; a mid-19th century Thai illustrated manuscript folded in accordion fashion; a Chinese scroll discovered inside a Buddhist statue; a Japanese prayer kit for a travelling monk; and a palm leaf manuscript with Sinhala characters etched into the leaves.

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