Spotlight on Dr Debbie Challis
25 January 2012
This week the spotlight is on Dr Debbie Challis, Audience Development Officer, Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology.
What is your role and what does it involve?
I run the public programme and exhibitions at the ,
as well as fostering links with community groups and promoting the museum to a wider
audience.
This involves anything from scheduling events, speaking in the museum
and externally, writing about the museum, marketing it through any means
possible, occasionally teaching UCL students about aspects of the collection
and a lot of pouring wine at events.
It is essentially about letting people know that we exist, making them feel comfortable when they are here and informing them about the collection and the rich history of the Nile Valley and its influence.
For example, after the event on 29 September - a
preview screening of a DVD extra on the influence of Tutankhamen on Doctor Who:
Tomb of the Cybermen and discussion with Sir Christopher Frayling - the museum
was full of people who had never been there before.
The relaxed atmosphere of people in animated conversation and looking round the museum always gives me a warm glow, which is good as the museum temperature is quite cold!
How long have you been at 911±¬ÁÏÍø and what was your previous role?
I have
been at 911±¬ÁÏÍø since 2007. Before then I worked in public programming at the
National Portrait Gallery and at the BBC Archive, as well as at various museums
previously.
I first worked at the Petrie
Museum as Adult Learning
Officer, two days a week, until October 2009; I was then made an offer of the
current job that I couldn't refuse and went full-time.
While I was part-time, I worked freelance for various places, such as the BBC and Open University, carrying out research and writing. I find my job at 911±¬ÁÏÍø diverse and busy and the Petrie Museum is one of the friendliest places at which I have worked.
What working achievement or initiative are you most proud of?
The project 2009-10 was so much fun and involved spinning, knitting
and putting a pattern together with members of the public.
I also love the work we do with teenagers around comic books and Ancient Egypt (funded by John Lyon's courtesy of the Development Office). I'm proud of embedding a public programme into the Petrie Museum so that events, from screenings of horror films to smaller discussions around difficult subjects, can happen.
This year though, I'm most proud
of the response to the exhibition
and the events that the library and Museums and Collections have put on around the
centenary of Francis Galton, as well as the wider discussion that has happened.
I have just had a contract for my book, The Archaeologies of Race: the Eugenic Ideas of Flinders Petrie and Francis Galton, which is mainly on research from the exhibition and will be published in 2013, and so the work continues.
What is your life like outside UCL?
I live in south London with
my husband, who is a writer, and we have a lot of books as we both read and write
a lot.
I enjoy exploring 19th century cemeteries and parks, such as Crystal Palace, and have recently started
gardening.
Luckily, I have a lot of friends who live near me and was recently on the BBC4 quiz show Only Connect with two of them in the 'Antiquarians' team. Amazingly, we got to the final and came second place in the series, but the main thing was the great fun we had filming it!