These high jumping shoes with spikes were used by Kurt Wüthrich in the early 1960s. Wüthrich’s interest in competitive sports was awakened during his years as a high school student at Biel high school in Switzerland. Although he decided to pursue a career in chemistry and physics, athletics remained an important part of his life.
Kurt Wüthrich donated the shoes to the Nobel Prize Museum in 2016.
In his 2002 Nobel Prize lecture, Kurt Wüthrich used his belt to illustrate research on proteins he and his co-laureates had conducted. If the belt represented a polypeptide chain, which forms proteins, then the co-laureates’ work measured the belt’s length. Wüthrich's task was to map the three-dimensional coils of the belt.
Kurt Wüthrich donated the belt to the Nobel Prize Museum in 2013.