The Art of Mediation: Manifesto
Source: The Munch Museum
This video offers a personal and reflective perspective on art mediation, inviting viewers to rethink how they experience and interpret art.
At its core is a simple but powerful idea: your way of seeing matters. Rather than adapting to a single “correct” way of looking, you are encouraged to trust your own voice, your presence, and your perspective within the exhibition space.
Art becomes not just something to observe, but something to experience, question, and connect with—through your own memories, ideas, and associations.
🔹 In this video, you will explore:
- Why personal perspective is essential in experiencing art
- The difference between information and interpretation
- How storytelling connects us to history, identity, and memory
- Why art comes to life through the presence of the viewer
- How contemporary art invites multiple meanings and experiences
The video also reflects on the role of museums today—not as static spaces, but as places where art becomes alive through interaction, dialogue, and diverse audiences. Through references to artists like Edvard Munch and Sandra Mujinga, it highlights how art engages with emotion, identity, visibility, and the possibilities of the future.
Ultimately, this is an invitation to see art as a space of plurality, imagination, and connection—where your interpretation is not only valid, but necessary.

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.




















