Whole Health frameworks for museums, cultural organizations, and public wellbeing.

I help museums and cultural organizations use Whole Health as a practical framework for programs, partnerships, interpretation, staff training, and visitor experience. This work positions museums as civic spaces where people can practice attention, connection, movement, reflection, creativity, and belonging, without pretending that museums are clinics or that art is medicine by default.

Reach out here to learn more about the Whole Health framework for museums.

A woman practicing yoga outdoors in a modern circular structure with large round holes, surrounded by trees, during daytime as an example of Whole Health in Museums.
People standing in a circle listening to a tour guide in a lush green park with abstract sculptures and trees around as an example of Whole Health in Museums.
A group of people seated on mats in a modern art gallery, participating in a meditation or yoga session led by a woman sitting cross-legged with her hand on her chest. The gallery has large abstract paintings on the walls and sculptures in the background.

Movement and Whole Health

I design museum programs that connect art, movement, breath, and embodied awareness. These experiences use galleries, pavilions, sculpture parks, and outdoor museum spaces as settings where visitors can practice Whole Health through the body, using art as a companion for attention, balance, reflection, and restoration.

Art, Nature, and Attention

I design museum experiences that use art and the natural world to support attention, reflection, movement, and connection. In sculpture parks, trails, gardens, and outdoor museum spaces, Whole Health becomes something visitors can practice through slow looking, sensory awareness, guided conversation, and time with place.

Mindfulness in the Galleries

I design gallery experiences that use works of art as anchors for attention, breath, reflection, and embodied awareness. These programs help visitors slow down, notice what is happening in the body and mind, and practice Whole Health through the museum itself, not as an add-on, but as a way of being with art.