MeWell Talks Episode #1 | Working with Dementia in Cultural Mediation with Nina Mayer
In this short video, cultural mediator Nina Mayer shares her approach to working with people living with dementia through multisensory cultural mediation.
The session demonstrates how simple yet thoughtful methods—such as starting with everyday objects, engaging multiple senses, and creating a calm, respectful atmosphere—can open meaningful opportunities for participation, expression, and connection.
Rather than focusing on limitations, this approach emphasizes presence, lived experience, and human dignity. Participants are invited to explore artworks together through touch, sound, smell, and personal associations, while facilitators guide the process without judgment or predefined expectations.
What you will learn
- How sensory objects can support trust and engagement
- Why multisensory approaches enable participation beyond verbal communication
- The importance of slowness, atmosphere, and emotional safety
- How art-based dialogue removes the pressure of “right” and “wrong”
- The role of non-verbal expression (e.g. clay, drawing) in inclusive practice
- Why the facilitator is part of the group, not positioned above it
This resource offers practical insights for cultural mediators, educators, and practitioners working in inclusive, care, or community contexts. It shows how art can become a shared space for connection, openness, and mutual learning.
🌐 Learn more about Nina Mayer’s work: https://www.nina-mayer.at/

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.




















