Grégoire Hermann

Grégoire Hermann

Digital Communities Manager - Team LeaderLondon, United Kingdom
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Grégoire Hermann

Grégoire Hermann

Digital Communities Manager - Team LeaderLondon, United Kingdom
About me
A dedicated professional with over twelve years experience working for international organisations in Travel & Tourism, Heritage and Arts & Culture sectors. I have extensive knowledge of video, social media, blogs, web, and podcast content, more than four years of experience in team management, and am used to delivering inclusion and diversity strategies.
Projects credited in
  • Where Light Falls - St Paul's Cathedral and Coventry Cathedral - Free light shows
    Where Light Falls - St Paul's Cathedral and Coventry Cathedral - Free light showsHistoric England is working with the Poetry Society and leading creatives Double Take Projections on Where Light Falls to tell the story of those who risked their lives to protect the places they loved during the Second World War, at two cathedrals with opposing fates – London’s St Paul’s survived the Blitz largely intact whilst the medieval Coventry Cathedral could not be saved.
  • What Remains - a free exhibition at IWM London
    What Remains - a free exhibition at IWM LondonFrom the Nazi theft of art and the bombing of cathedrals in Coventry and Dresden to the destruction of objects from Mosul Museum in Iraq, war devastates lives, kills people and destroys the cultural heritage that they hoped would outlive them. Sometimes destruction is accidental, but often our cherished places, objects and stories are deliberately targeted in conflict.
  • Sites of sabotage, a history of protest - 11 June 2018
    Sites of sabotage, a history of protest - 11 June 2018Is there historic value in sites that have witnessed political and social protest? We held a panel discussion on Monday 11 June at the Royal Academy in London. In February 1912 Emmeline Pankhurst declared that: “the argument of the broken pane of glass is the most valuable argument in modern politics”. The right for some women to vote was won in 1918, in part through militant protest, including a considerable number of attacks on the built environment – both public and private property. The Royal Academy itself was a prominent site of protest, with suffragette Mary Wood attacking John Singer Sargent RA’s portrait of the author Henry James on the opening day of the 1914 Summer Exhibition. Sargent’s portrait can be seen this year in The Great Spectacle exhibition, telling the story of 250 years of the Summer Exhibition. The panel will debated this hot topic in light of Historic England’s upcoming Suffrage Centenary listings that form part of Historic England’s HerStories campaign to enrich the national record of listed sites with women’s history – making history Her Story. Speakers included: Prof Krista Cowman – Professor of History and Director of Research, University of Lincoln; author of Women in British politics, c. 1689-1979 Emily Gee – London Planning Director, Historic England Stewy – artist, author of life size stencils of psycho-geographically placed British icons, such as Mary on the Green Rachel Cooke (chair) – journalist and author of Her Brilliant Career: Ten Extraordinary Women of the Fifties (2013)
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Work history
    Historic England logo
    Historic England logo
    Digital Communities ManagerHistoric England
    London, United KingdomFull Time
Skills
  • Marketing Strategy
  • Social Media Marketing
  • Online Advertising
  • Brand Strategy
  • Digital Campaigns
  • Exhibition Audio-visuals
  • CRM
  • Content Strategy
  • Team Management
Awards
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    Branded Podcast - Silver AwardBritish Podcast Awards
    Award for Irreplaceable: A History of England in 100 Places, a podcast presented by Dr Suzannah Lipscomb (season 2) and Emma Barnett (season 1). https://historicengland.org.uk/campaigns/100-places/