Appropriate or reclaim the museum
National Costume Centre has always focused its public policy on equal opportunities and territorial equity by applying a reception and mediation policy that makes culture accessible to as many people as possible.
The tools to help visitors: game-books, manipulations, audioguides, guided tours, digital tablets... imagined by the CNCS are many, original and designed for an audience with disabilities. In more than a decade, nearly 90,000 specific schools and audiences have been hosted in workshops.
Since 2015, the CNCS is at the initiative of an innovative Territory Cultural Project in partnership with the Bourbon Land of Mills where social and generational diversity are priorities. This unifying project for local actors aims at equal opportunities and territorial equity through arts and cultural education in order to promote access to culture, to make the beneficiaries of the project discover and sensitize them to the different trades of the stage costume, the live show and its creation.
This project brings together young public groups (school or extracurricular), young people in difficulty (IME), adults (second chance schools) and the elderly (retirement homes).
Each participant is part of a group that visits the CNCS, meets artists, goes to a show in a partner room and participates in artistic practice workshops. The group is committed to sponsoring a new group and thus contributes to sharing practices and knowledge....
The price Dare the museum of the Ministry of Culture distinguishes museums engaged in a proactive and innovative policy towards people in situations of exclusion or social and economic vulnerability.
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