Category: Museum

  • The Architecture of Peace: A Dialogue Across Generations at the Museum of the Army

    Under the golden dome of the Hôtel des Invalides, History doesn’t just sit behind glass; it interrogates you. It was within these monumental walls, surrounded by centuries of heavy stone and the artifacts of the Museum of the Army in Paris, that we gathered a cohort of international children for a MOSHI workshop.

    The question we brought with us was deceptive in its simplicity: What is Peace?

    To help us untangle it, we didn’t look to textbooks. We looked to the collection of the Musée de l’ Armée Hôtel des Invalides, and we looked to someone who had lived through the very antithesis of the question: a grandfather who had served in the elite French Green Berets “The Commandos Marine”.

    Moshi workshop: What is Peace?

    The Weight of the Past

    Our journey began among the grand narratives of human conflict.

    The children stood before the towering, intricate steel armors of medieval knights, moving sequentially through time to the precision-crafted weapons of the Napoleonic era.

    At first glance, a museum of the army looks like a monument to war. But as the children studied the archival pieces, a deeper realization emerged. These heavy breastplates and polished sabers weren’t just tools of aggression; they were also the stark, physical testaments created by men and women trying to protect their homes, their families, and the hard-won peace of their nations against invaders.

    The grandfather stood with them, a living bridge to that History. Looking at the machinery of combat, he spoke to the children with absolute candor.

    He didn’t romanticize the uniform. Instead, he shared the quiet, heavy truth of a man who had seen the front lines: war is an atrocity, a profound human failure, and his greatest hope was that none of the children standing before him would ever have to experience its reality.

    The Studio: Micro-Conflicts and Crayon Diplomacy

    To ground these massive concepts of global conflict and veteran testimony, we transitioned the children into the active, creative core of the MOSHI Method. We asked them to pick up crayons and markers, to draw the history and feelings they had just absorbed, and to collaborate.

    But we introduced a constraint: they had to share the tools.

    Human nature, whether in a geopolitics board room or a museum atelier, is remarkably consistent. Within minutes, micro-frictions sparked. Sibling rivalries flared. Two children wanted the exact same crimson marker at the exact same moment. Voices escalated.

    A miniature war of ownership was brewing. Instead of stepping in as authoritative judges, the MOSHI facilitators paused. We turned to the rest of the cohort. We asked the other children to step in, look at the dispute, and help their peers navigate the conflict.

    The Birth of Diplomacy

    What followed was a beautiful, emergent masterclass in human relations.

    Left to co-create a solution, the children began to negotiate. They established a system of sharing, negotiated time-limits, and bartered colors. They didn’t just resolve a fight over a crayon; they discovered, entirely by themselves, the foundational mechanics of international diplomacy.

    By the end of the session, when we asked the children to define Peace their answers had transformed. It was no longer an abstract, global concept. It was intimate, local, and actionable:

    “Peace is being a nice person.” L. 5 years old

    “It means not getting angry just because we disagree or want the same thing.R. 6 years old

    Inside a monument built to honor the warriors of the past, a new generation realized that Peace isn’t just the absence of war: it is a daily, creative practice of empathy, sharing, and self-regulation. They walked out of Les Invalides not just with a better understanding of history, but with the personal blueprints to build a more harmonious future.

    Moshi workshop: What is Peace? At Museum of the Army Hôtel des Invalides, Paris
  • A Recess Reimagined: The Story of MOSHI Camp New York

    The Moshi philo-artistic camp in New York took place in Long Island City during the 2018 school recess. Long Island City is a New York middle-class neighborhood located in Queens with a magnificent view on Manhattan.

    Children participants went to public schools attending a multitude of after-school activities. The participants had various ethnic and religious backgrounds: Southeast Asian Agnostics, South-American Catholics, East European Jews, East Asian and European Christians and Agnostics. The average was 7 participants a day, from 5 to 9 years old. 

    Moshi Workshop: from discovering neighborhood street art to defining respect in chalk

    The activities were conducted indoor and outdoor. Families offered their home or the playroom in their condominium. From Monday to Friday, 9am to 3pm, children could play, debate, discover their neighborhood, visit local museums and make artworks based on a daily philosophical question: What is nature? What is respect? What is identity? What is art? What is community? 

    In the New York City camp, Friedrich Nietzsche’s mustache 🥸 was also used as a face make-up to symbolically empower children. However, we started the camp with Ralph Waldo Emerson’s philosophical ideas in order to help them transcend their pragmatic thinking into artworks:

    “Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.” Ralph Waldo Emerson

    Children started the camp by role playing the Fable the Mountain and the Squirrel. They were asked to analyze the story problematized with Socratic questioning led by Moshi educator. In a world where it seems difficult for adults to find their place, we wanted to tackle the individuation problem as early as possible.

    Following Carl Jung’s hero journey, we brought participants to discover their neighborhood in creative manners. The objective was for them to inquire into their surrounding world to start building their true self. At MoMA PS1 and Noguchi Museum, children could directly interact with abstract thinking through modern and contemporary artworks. They were asked to mimic abstract work of art. It allowed them to directly feel through their body what they were seeing. Therefore it helped them for philosophical reasoning and self-discovery.

    Moshi Workshop at MoMA PS1

    “Artists keep the world together by making amazing things that express people’s feelings. Artworks show the world how you feel about what’s happening” A., 9 years old

    Moshi Workshop at Noguchi Museum

    “Art gives sense to what seems nonsense” S., 9 years old

    The essay was originally published in the collective book “Growing Up With Philosophy Camps. How Learning to Think Develops Friendship, Community, and a Sense of Self” (ed. Claire Katz), Rowman & Littlefield, 2020.