VC PER Awards - Dr Lucy Kaufman

 

The Vice-Chancellor's Public Engagement with Research Awards
Lucy Kaufman

Dr Lucy Kaufman

Dr Kaufman won her award for her work with the National Trust during their renovation of The Vyne, where Henry VIII visited his Lord Chamberlain, Sir William Sandys in the summer of 1535.

Dr Kaufman’s research has shaped an innovative new visitor experience at The Vyne, transforming the ground floor into an immersive depiction of its rich and vital history, particularly the Tudor progress. She worked with curators, heritage professionals, and an interdisciplinary team of scholars to reimagine this crucial moment in British history. From animated moving-tapestry panels to a breathtaking chapel that looks, smells, and sounds as it would have done during Henry’s visit, the exhibition has brought new life to well-known stories and cutting-edge research to the public. 

 

The Vyne - animated medieval tapestries film in the Stone Gallery

The Vyne - animated medieval tapestries film in the Stone Gallery

(c) National Trust Images, Dennis Gilbert

In addition to the estimated 180,000 visitors to the exhibition, Dr Kaufman has also engaged over million readers and listeners through talks, articles, and interviews at The Vyne and in the media, including BBC radio and television, reaching an ever greater and broader range of publics.

Dr Kaufman says the project has changed her fundamentally as a scholar, crystallizing new ideas about her own research and discovering new ways of sharing it with audiences.

The Vice-Chancellor's Public Engagement with Research Awards recognise and reward those at the University who undertake high-quality engagement activities and have contributed to building capacity in this area. Dr Kaufman was one of five Early Career Researcher winners at the awards.

Professor Louise Richardson, Vice-Chancellor says: “I have been deeply impressed by the quality of the public engagement with research projects submitted for this year’s awards. The breadth and diversity of the activities taking place show how seriously the University takes its commitment to public engagement.”

Professor Alison Woollard, the University’s Academic Champion for Public Engagement with Research says: “Public engagement enriches both research and society and the University is committed to enabling our researchers to inspire, consult and collaborate with the public. I’m delighted that we are able to recognise and highlight the fantastic work our researchers are doing and hope these awards encourage more colleagues across the University to carry out their own public engagement with research.”

The Vyne - Tudor chapel interior

The Vyne - Tudor chapel interior

©National Trust Images, Oskar Proctor