Workshop Series: Finding Awe
We all could use a little more awe in our lives—come find it in the museum! In this series of interactive workshops, we’ll meditate on awe in our lives and in art. Join us for a pause from your daily routine, to breathe deeply and look mindfully at a single work of art. You’ll be invited to look closely, wonder, and share your own awe experiences. We hope you’ll leave with some “awe practices,” tools for cultivating an awe mindset in your daily life.
Session 1: Jasper Francis Cropsey, Autumn—On the Hudson River
Take an “awe walk” through a panoramic landscape, practice slowing down and activating your senses to the present moment. Explore transcendentalist philosophy and its relationship to awe.
This program is grounded in the National Gallery’s longstanding commitment to slow looking and offers new “awe practices” drawn from the research of Dacher Keltner, Professor of Psychology at the University of California-Berkeley, director of The Greater Good Science Center, and author of Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life (2023). Research shows that experiences of awe help support mental and physical wellbeing, open us up to greater creativity and deeper empathy, and connect us to our shared humanity. The National Gallery and UC-Berkeley are collaborating on what awe might look like in art museums.
Ages 18 and up. Led by senior educator Nathalie Ryan. Questions? Email [email protected]