Sensescape Toolbox
Den här texten finns bara tillgänglig på engelska.
The project Sensescape Toolbox explores the potential of multisensory exploration to support the inclusion and well-being of children with autism and ADHD in museum spaces. Its main goal is to enhance the museum visit experience for all children while promoting a sense of belonging, curiosity, and shared experience by creating common ground. Differences in sensory processing are reimagined as unique ways of connecting with the world rather than as challenges or obstacles, encouraging new ways of thinking about accessibility and interaction in cultural spaces.
To bridge the existing gap in museum accessibility, the project offers a bag of multisensory exploration tools and temporary objects that allow young visitors to customize their museum experience—without the need to alter existing exhibitions or implement structural changes to the museum environment. These tools are designed to function independently of an exhibition’s theme or design, making them flexible and adaptable across a variety of settings.
What would happen if you could hear the walls talk—but everything else was silent?
If you could make everything suddenly turn blue?
If you could see single fibres, tiny moth-eaten holes, and unwashable stains on 18th-century clothes?
If you could touch what’s locked behind the glass of a display case?
@rebarbora_r
raskova.barbora@gmail.com