Museum Sage makes your leadership and team events unique and meaningful 

 

Museum Sage® is a guided experience that offers participants insights into a personal, business, or social question through a work of art.

They deeply connect to their inner sage, the people they’re playing with, and the art.

First developed as an in-person program, it’s also available as an online experience for you to offer in your seminars.

Benefits For You as a Transformation Provider

  • Generates enthusiasm about your leadership, team building, or problem-solving session.

  • Engages attendees and energizes them to fully participate.

  • Offers a memorable experience that helps your program stand out. 


Benefits For Your Attendees

  • Provides a whole-brain* process that energizes participants. 

  • Creates different perspectives and new options for solving personal, business, or social problems that can lead to positive change.

  • Develops empathy, compassion, and understanding that transcends differences in race, culture, age, gender, and more.

  • It’s fun, and unlike anything your team has ever experienced.

 
 

“Our Museum Sage session got a 94% approval rating from 18 globally based directors. That’s an unusually high score from this discerning group.”

– A.M., Executive Coach & Senior Program Manager, Fortune 500 Global company

For more details and a free demo, connect with Laurie Phillips, laurie@museumsage.com, 651.225.0858

 

*There is increasing evidence in the field of neuroscience that art enhances brain function by impacting brain wave patterns, emotions, and the nervous system. Art can also raise serotonin levels. These benefits don’t just come from making art, they also occur by experiencing art. Observing art can stimulate the creation of new neural pathways and ways of thinking. In a study conducted by Professor Semir Zeki, chair in neuroaesthetics at University College London, participants underwent brain scans while being shown images of paintings by major artists. The study found that when people viewed the art they thought was most beautiful, blood flow increased by as much as 10% to the reign of the brain associated with pleasure — the equivalent to looking at a loved one. Art accesses many of the advanced processes of the human brain, such as intuitive analysis, expressivity, and embodied cognition.American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine