
Reflections on Reflecting
Lisa Hester is a visual artist and academic, drawn to how play and symbolic language can create space for wellbeing and emotional expression in community and care contexts. She is currently developing an arts practice with older people in residential care and lectures on the MA Art, Psyche and the Creative Imagination programme at TUS Limerick School of Art and Design.
Hester was awarded an artsandhealth.ie Emerging Artist Bursary in 2025, funded by the Arts Council and HSE, to reflect on her arts and health practice. She homed in on her own reflective habits – how she interprets situations and documents affective experiences – and their role in ethical decision-making.
In Reflections on Reflecting, Hester sets out the conceptual framing that guided her inquiry, summarises the development of her practice to date, and provides short overviews of the reflective episodes that shaped her learning.
The reflection is accompanied by a digital archive of her reflective materials (accessed via a QR code), which includes extended written reflections, visual documentation and audio fragments.
A framework for reflecting
‘In arts and health settings, where emotional sensitivity and changing interpersonal dynamics are common, reflection becomes a practical necessity.’
Hester sets out to explore reflection as a ‘structured practice,’ guided by theoretical frameworks such as Donald Schön’s concept of The Reflective Practitioner (1983), with its distinction between ‘reflection-in-action’ (thinking and adapting during practice) and ‘reflection-on-action’ (thinking and learning after the events).
Over time, we accumulate reflexive ways of working, tacit assumptions and habits that Schön argues, a structured reflection process can bring into the light. Working in challenging settings with vulnerable people, we often get caught in the ‘action trap’, moving from one demand to the next, without time to process what we’ve experienced. This concept was introduced to Hester by Dominic Campbell, Director of Arts and Culture at the Irish Hospice Foundation, during preparation for their Arts and Culture Bereavement and Grief Training programme.
‘Without reflection, exhaustion grows; with reflection, experiences are integrated and made usable.’
Turning Experience into Knowledge
When we turn experience into knowledge (Schön), we are better equipped to respond to challenging situations. Hester analyses five key moments from her career using Graham Gibbs’ Reflective Cycle (1988) to gain a better understanding of her arts and health practice to date. She traces her journey from art school, through her time as an as an activity co-ordinator, and her role as an artist in a care setting. Two of the ‘episodes’ take place during Hester’s bursary, which enables her to use the Reflective Cycle methodology in real time.
‘Without this process, many insights would have stayed unexamined, reinforcing the “action trap” of moving from project to project without learning from them. That pace (focused on accumulation rather than integration) can slip into burnout and dissatisfaction. It also made clear that I am still at the early stages of developing a practice within care-home environments.’
Turning Knowledge into Action
The bursary helped Hester to identify gaps in her reflective habits and clarify the direction of her practice. She has recently been awarded an Arts Council / Create Artist in the Community Scheme Award for a new care home project with older people, which she developed using the reflective learning from key episodes of her career.
Returning to the same residential setting, where she started as an activity co-ordinator and developed her arts and health practice, Hester will bring her multimodal reflective approach to the project and continue to refine the methods shaped through the bursary.
by Lisa Hester (source: www.artsandhealth.ie/reflections-on-reflecting), 2026-01-08

Wellbeing Is More Than Feeling Good: What Cultural Mediation Can Learn from Psychology
When we speak about wellbeing, we often speak in simplified terms. We ask whether people feel happy, satisfied, positive, or emotionally balanced. These are important questions, but they may not be enough. Carol Ryff’s influential 1989 article challenged exactly this narrow understanding of wellbeing and argued that psychological wellbeing is much broader than happiness or life satisfaction alone .
For those of us working in cultural mediation and adult learning, this insight remains deeply relevant. If culture is to contribute to wellbeing, then its role cannot be limited to entertainment, distraction, or temporary emotional uplift. Cultural experiences can also support meaning, connection, growth, dignity, and agency.
Beyond Happiness




























