Skip to main content

An older person in a wheelchair looks up at the art on the walls of a gallery and smiles.

Ruben Verwaal has been awarded a grant by the Dutch Heritage Council (RCE, 2025-26) for the ‘Valuable and Healing’ project.

Building on a long tradition of research on the therapeutic potential of visual and material culture, ‘Valuable and Healing’ applies explicitly to medical heritage – a domain often excluded from these studies due to the association with illness, trauma and stigma.  

The two-year project will focus on how Dutch heritage collections can positively contribute to the mental and physical wellbeing of both individuals and communities in an inclusive and non-hierarchical way. Partners include the Museum for the History and Science of Medicine (Museum Boerhaave), the Museum for Nursing (Museum voor Verpleegkunde), the Museum of the Mind (Museum van de Geest), the Dutch Orphanage Museum (Museum Kinderdorp Neerbosch), and Dr Manon Parry from the University of Amsterdam. 

Drawing on qualitative and quantitative research on participation projects such as ‘Yo, Doc, Listen Up!’ - a co-curated exhibition about deafness – and a recent study by the Museum Boerhaave on the acquisition of objects relating to fertility problems, the project will also feature an international expert meeting and symposium.

Image credit: Museum Boerhaave