
Making a Memory Box: Ciara Neufeldt and Dementia-Friendly Workshops
Supporting the work of contemporary artists has always been integral to the mission of the V&A: to champion creativity and inspire makers, creators and innovators everywhere. Since 1869—when the V&A’s first Director Henry Cole offered an onsite studio to the pioneering photographer Julia Margaret Cameron—the museum has hosted over 70 artists in residence.
The Adobe Creative Residency Programme at the V&A was initiated in 2024. Each year, three artists spend 12 months in residence in dedicated studios onsite at the V&A South Kensington. They take inspiration from the world-class collection and collaborate with the Learning Team to expand public programming with schools, young people, and families. The residencies bring making into the core of the museum, and gives artists and creators unprecedented access, with the opportunity to display their work at the V&A at the end of the programme.
Ciara (left) sitting on one of her ceramic stools. In the joyful form of a jelly mould, they provide a place for rest and conversation. Ciara’s work uses the ‘nerikomi’ technique of layering coloured clays to create vibrant patterns. Photos by Ciara Neufeldt.
Ciara Neufeldt
Ciara Neufeldt is the Adobe Foundation’s 2025 resident for Mosaics, Ceramics and Tilework. She is a craftsperson, participatory artist and facilitator creating objects and installations that bring playfulness and joy into public spaces. Over the past twelve months, it has been a privilege to be the Curatorial Mentor to Ciara, acting as her guide to the Gilbert Collection and assisting her in navigating the wider Decorative Art and Sculpture collection.
Ciara’s work reimagines functional, everyday objects as colourful and sumptuously decorated ceramics. She aims to create inclusive and accessible experiences with art in our daily environments and encourages self-expression through decoration. During her residency, she worked alongside the V&A Families division to deliver workshops, facilitate community outreach projects and create functional public installations.
Ciara leading a workshop for families in the V&A’s Raphael Courts. © Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Photo by Hydar Dewachi
Decoration, Collaboration & Gold Boxes
Ciara’s interests are cross-disciplinary and diverse, but they are chiefly connected by themes of accessibility, community and collective making. During her residency, Ciara and I explored a quilt sewn and designed by inmates at the prison estate of HMP Wandsworth, and mosaics embedded in the fabric of the buildings at V&A South Kensington and Young V&A , made by women within Woking and Fulham prisons in the late 19th century.
By contrast, we also looked at aluminium jelly moulds, Wedgwood table ornaments, silver cake slices and Ebony Russell’s piped porcelain work ‘Superfluous Garland Swag Urn and Pedestal’. The inherent fun and playful nature of confectionary, cakes, icing and jelly influenced the form and detailing within Ciara’s ceramics, notably the scalloped shape of the ‘Quilted Jelly’ stools and the contrast piping. The stools were decorated in collaboration with children at the V&A’s Spring Family Festival.
Left: Table Ornament, ca. 1800, Josiah Wedgwood and Sons, stoneware with applied reliefs. Museum no. 2383-1901. © Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Right: ‘Quilted Jelly’ stool, 2025, Ciara Neufeldt, coloured clay, transparent glaze, gold lustre. © Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Photo by Peter Kelleher
Ciara was likewise attracted to Frederick II’s snuffboxes in the Gilbert Collection, remarkable for their incredible craftsmanship on a small scale, and lavish decoration with coloured hardstones and diamonds. Ciara shares the Gilbert’s love of exquisite materials and embellishment, and says that it was the level of ornamentation that initially drew her to Frederick’s gold boxes: “I am into things that are heavily ornate and decorative as a way of self-expression, which I think these boxes were as well… I just love ornamentation, decoration, colour, and texture.” However, it was Rosalinde and Arthur’s ethos—that their collection of decorative arts masterpieces was “not for us, but for everyone”—that Ciara eventually felt most connection and alignment with.
Left: Ciara handling one of the Frederick II snuffboxes in the Gilbert Collection; Right: a selection of Ciara’s reference and inspiration images (right). Photos by Jessica Insley.
Dementia-Friendly Design
In the UK, nearly one million people live with dementia. Museums are uniquely placed cultural institutions as they can foster feelings of connection, wonder and joy through their engaging environments. In response, the V&A has actively been creating programming that address the needs of those diagnosed with dementia, particularly through the Cognitive Stimulation Therapy programme, supported by The Gilbert Trust for the Arts.
When plans for the major redevelopment of the Gilbert Galleries were being formulated, a conscious decision was made to integrate dementia-friendly design into the physical, permanent gallery space. To understand how to achieve this, people living with dementia and their carers were consulted directly. Feedback from these sessions underscored the value of sensory experiences (such as touch and scent) and thoughtful storytelling. They also highlighted the importance of museums providing prompts and resources for carers.
Memory Box Workshops
After learning more about these consultations and the inclusive, multi-sensory design choices within the Gilbert Galleries, Ciara and I worked together with the Learning Team to develop three workshops for those living with dementia in December 2025. We hoped that the workshops would create authentic, personal connections between the participants, Ciara’s practice and the gold boxes in the Gilbert Collection.
Ten participants living with dementia and their carers were invited to the V&A for a handling session with a selection of Gilbert Collection gold boxes, followed by two creative workshops led by Ciara and artist Katie Spragg. Everyone had the opportunity to make their own ‘gold’ memory box, exploring pattern and decoration through clay. The boxes were then fired in the V&A’s kiln and returned to the participants as keepsakes. Ciara emphasises that “it’s important that people just come and touch, play and have that time and space to make something. Sometimes, the final object is really important. But then, maybe in this context, it is less about the final object, and it is more about the process.”
Left: The making table at the first ‘gold’ box making workshop with Ciara Neufeldt and Katie Spragg. Centre: A box awaiting firing after the second making session. Right: The finished boxes out of the kiln. Photos by Jessica Insley
The Learning Team also produced a printed resource for the Gilbert Galleries inspired by Ciara’s creative practice, to be used by people living with dementia and their carers visiting the museum. It includes references to objects in the collection (particularly the gold boxes), with personal conversational prompts and suggested creative activities to do at home.
Extract from ‘Scrapbook Stories’, the Gilbert Galleries’ resource for people living with dementia (distributed from the Learning Centre, available from March 2026) © Victoria & Albert Museum, London
Final Display
The Adobe Creative Residency Programme culminates in a free, year-long exhibition of the residents’ work. After passing an austere fountain in the V&A’s Medieval and Renaissance galleries on the way to her studio every day, Ciara felt that its design was a missed opportunity for joy, making it incompatible with the hopeful and wishful visitors who threw their coins. Her fountain offers a brighter and more welcoming experience of wish-making.
In her ‘Wishing Fountain’, Ciara’s ambition to improve accessibility to the arts and creative opportunities for underrepresented groups is also realised. To make the wishing well’s tiles, she partnered with the rehabilitation charity Fine Cell Work to hold workshops for people with experience of incarceration. Together, they explored decoration techniques and collective making through clay, with many participating hands bringing the fountain to life. The addition of coins and water completes the artwork, celebrating the senses and welcoming visitor interaction.
By Jessica Insley (Source: www.vam.ac.uk ), 2026-01-06

Where art meets science: cultural mediation across disciplines
Source: Science(s) en Occitanie
This MeWell podcast episode explores the meeting point between art, science, technology, and society. It reflects on how artists, researchers, and cultural mediators can work together to make complex scientific ideas more accessible, imaginative, and open to public dialogue.
The episode looks at examples of art-science collaborations, including projects involving artificial intelligence, robotics, sound mediation, and interdisciplinary residencies. It highlights how cultural mediation can create bridges between different forms of knowledge and support audiences in engaging with uncertainty, creativity, and critical reflection.




























