Cultivating Participation: Cultural Mediation in Public Art Practice
Resource: Museums & Galleries of NSW
In this video, Emily Sullivan, Curator at Kaldor Public Art Projects, reflects on a recent project developed with artist Asad Raza, focusing on the “cultivators” programme. She shares insights into how cultural mediation operates within the context of public art, where engagement extends beyond traditional exhibition formats into participatory, process-driven experiences.
The discussion highlights how mediation can become embedded in the artistic process itself, enabling audiences to take on active roles and co-create meaning. Through the cultivators programme, participants are not only visitors but contributors—engaging with ideas, materials, and environments in ways that blur the boundaries between artist, mediator, and audience.
Presented as part of a workshop by Museums & Galleries of NSW in partnership with Artspace, this session contributes to a broader exploration of cultural mediation as both a conceptual framework and a practical tool. It is particularly relevant for curators, educators, and cultural professionals interested in participatory art practices and innovative approaches to audience engagement.

MeWell Talks Episode #3 | Slowing Down, Sensing and Meaning-Making with Karen Vanhercke
In this episode of MeWell Talks, cultural mediator Karen Vanhercke introduces the practice of art-based dialogue as a method for deepening perception, expanding awareness, and reconnecting with our senses.
Framed as both a dialogue method and a form of liberation from habitual ways of seeing, this session invites participants to slow down and engage with art beyond quick judgment and surface interpretation.
At the core of this approach are three interconnected dimensions:
- Embodiment – experiencing art through the body
- Time – allowing perception to unfold gradually
- Language – sharing and shaping meaning through dialogue
Through a guided collective viewing of a sculpture, participants move between observation and perception, exploring associations, sensations, and interpretations. The process demonstrates how meaning is not fixed, but emerges through shared attention, presence, and dialogue.
🔹 In this video, you will explore:
- How slowing down transforms the way we experience art
- The relationship between observation and perception
- How embodied attention deepens engagement
- The role of dialogue in meaning-making
- How art-based dialogue supports awareness, agency, and reflection
- Why there is no single “correct” interpretation
This episode also highlights how art can become a space for both wellbeing and disruption—where participants can feel, reflect, question, and connect in a safe and open environment.
🙏 Special thanks to all contributors and participants involved in the session.




















