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The Healing Value of Art

by Barbara Blair on 10/15/2010 8:53:57 AM

This post is by guest author, Barbara Blair This article has been edited and published with the author's permission. You should submit an article and share your views as a guest author by clicking here.  We've promoted this post to feature status because it provides great value to the FineArtViews community.  If you want your blog posts listed in the FineArtViews newsletter with the possibility of being republished to our 12,000+ subscribers,consider blogging with FASO Artist Websites.  This author's views are entirely his/her own and may not always reflect the views of BoldBrush, Inc.



For several years hospitals and medical facilities have included art in their buildings to help patients in their treatment and healing process, to calm fears, speed recovery, as well reduce stress for staff and visiting family members.

 

Several studies have been done on the benefits of art in the health care field.  Positive healing art images affect the autonomic nervous system, hormonal balance, brain neurotransmitters, the immune system and the blood flow to all organs in the body.  The most healing images are of expansive nature scenes, calm water, trees and flowers.

 

Healing artwork also has a valuable place in the home and office.  We are living in a very stressful world.  Many people are experiencing anxiety, sleep disorders, high blood pressure, depression and many other ailments as a result of stress, as it takes a heavy toll on the body and immune system.

 

Your home can be a powerful tool to create health, happiness and well-being, if it is filled with positive impressions and images.  You could think of art and everything else that you place in your environment as food that you ingest through your senses and that affects you on a cellular level.  Your body functions at maximum wellness surrounded with sympathetic compatible frequencies that create harmony.  It is therefore important to make choices that resonate with you in a positive way.

 

By placing images in your home and office that allow you to experience a moment of quiet reflection, or a sense of joy or upliftment at any time of the day, it will help you to combat stress and stay more balanced.  Think about what images and colors feel good, make you happy and inspire you.  For many people this involves pictures of nature, as the studies indicate.

 

What is hanging on your walls?  If you have dreary old pictures that you inherited from your grandmother as “family heirlooms” and feel obligated to hang them on your walls but have never liked them, give yourself permission to take them down.

 

The painter Henri Matisse said that art should be “something like a good armchair in which to rest from physical fatigue.”  Surround yourself with what you love (this applies to everything in your home, not just the artwork) and get rid of what you don’t love.

 

Then notice how your home or office has transformed into a joyful life-affirming space. 



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 22 Comments

Carol Schmauder
via canvoo.com
Very nice article Barbara. Beautiful art is very calming to the spirit. A few weeks ago I was talking to my daughter, who works in a hospice house, about donating some of my art to them to place on the walls so the patients could have something to focus on besides their impending death. They have some art pieces but not enough. I am hoping to follow through with this by the end of the year.

Tuva Stephens
via canvoo.com
You are right on target about the effects that art can have. I can think of examples in which people have purchased my art to help them mentally to accept events that have occurred in their life.

Even in this economy people are still buying art that touches them in a positive way! Keep on painting no matter what!

Marie Gruber
via canvoo.com
A very thought provoking and nice article Barbara, My Mother recently passed away. She had a great love of flowers and was unable to have any in her room in ICU so I sat there and drew her an arrangement. When she saw it she visibly brightened and loved her forever flowers. When she moved to a regular hospital room a very beautiful and serene landscape hung on the wall, calming to us both. Thank you for your article it is a reminder to me to focus on life affirming painting.

Stede Barber
via canvoo.com
Thank you for reminding me of this wonderful aspect of art. I just took down a show, and decided to hang one of my favorite pieces where I would see it upon awaking...it immediately lifts my spirits and gives me a jump start on my day. In case you'd like to see it: http://stedebarber.com/works/172900/after-the-storm

I would love to read more about studies done on the affects of art on our well-being...can you refer me to any sources?

I feel more calm just reading this...thank you again,

Stede

Esther J. Williams
via canvoo.com
We have lived in several homes in the past 15 years and my painting collection has grown by leaps and bounds. I decided instead of keeping my collection boxed up in the garage, I would hang many of them on the twelve foot walls in the living room and dining room. My home looks like a gallery now. When people come into my house, it`s the first thing they see and I love the reactions they give. "You painted all these?" Then they pick their favorites and I see them smile. Art really does affect people of all walks of life. They can be conversation starters too.
Oh, I still have the old antique paintings up, just in another room or hallway. My paintings take center stage. It does make me feel better that they are being enjoyed by viewers and our family also.
Psychologists have researched how color affects people`s moods, but one color, say red, can not be used as an exact science to create identical moods. Red means a happy heart to one person or a fire danger to another. Artists can use color in harmonious arrangements to provoke positive emotions and have a powerful impact on a viewer.

Carol Schmauder
via canvoo.com
I wish I had more wall space then I would do as you have done Esther. I love your last statement: Artists can use color in harmonious arrangements to provoke positive emotions and have a powerful impact on a viewer.

Barbara Blair
via canvoo.com
Marie, thank you for your touching testimonial to the positive effects of art.

Stede, go to http://henrydomke.com and download a free copy of his book "Picture of Health, Handbook for Healthcare Art." It has lots of information.

Donna Robillard
via canvoo.com
I wholeheartedly agree that art has an effect on people. When I sit in my dentist's chair, there is a very calming water scene to look at.

Marian Fortunati
via canvoo.com
Barbara,
I recently spent over two months in and out of our local hospital when my Dad was ill. Although the experience was stressful for him and all who care for him, one of of highlights of our days was walking 'round the floor when he could manage.
On the walls were many wonderful original artworks which had been donated by local artists.
During our stay we were on three different floors in one of the wings of the hospital and we got to see some exceptional work.
I recognized the work of many top-notch artists and enjoyed "visiting" them each day.

I can attest to the healing value of art... Dad is doing wonderfully and just celebrated his 92nd birthday!

Esther J. Williams
via canvoo.com
Carol, thanks, that statement is part me and partly from a book I read on color recently. It is amazing what color can do if used correctly in art. I have been experimenting with this new found knowledge on color and I have to say that as I paint, I am getting great mental and physical health benefits from it. If it works that way for me, I certainly hope it will be that beneficial for others on this earth. Color has universal aesthetic appeal, even babies are attracted to it as their eyesight develops. So much to learn about it.

Teresa Tromp
via canvoo.com
I received a Monet calendar one year for Christmas, and I didn't have a place for it at home, so I brought it to work. At the time Monet wasn't really one of my favorite artists. It hung on the wall near my desk.
Everytime I felt stressed or overwhelmed, my eyes would go over to the Monet calendar, and for some reason it had such a calming affect. I could understand why so many people enjoyed impressionism after that. Now, I have a new found love for impressionism, and ask for a Monet calendar every Christmas. The calendar stays at home now.

Fiona Purdy
via canvoo.com
Great article Barbara. I have printed out your post and will incorporate a few of the things you've said into my marketing and also when speaking to someone who wants to buy my art but is still not 100 percent sure about purchasing.

I used to paint pet portraits on large river rocks - I could create a 3-d portrait of the entire animal. A woman commissioned me to paint her father's cat Thomas life size on a river rock. He couldn't take the cat with him when he moved into a nursing home, but having the portrait o f"Thomas" there was a comfort to him.

This is the gift we artists have been incredibly blessed with!


Joanne Benson
via canvoo.com
Hi Barbara,
Thanks for this inspiring post! I truly relate to the healing power of art. I run an art show at my place of employment every year and it hangs for almost 3 months. Over 100 artworks and 30 artists participate. Whenever I'm feeling stressed I go into the meeting room/gallery and immediately become more calm and joyful.

I have a friend who is a prolific and well known NEPA artist and she has an abundance of paintings hanging in the halls of 2 large rehab facilities and I enjoyed her work while visiting my mom in one of the facilities recently. It truly is a blessing to all!

I especially relate to the part about surrounding yourself with things that you love. I redid my den/guest room about 5 years ago and picked a safari theme and hung some safari like paintings in there along with an antique butterfly/moth collection that I had reframed. I love that room and enjoy retreating to it to read quietly.

Now I need to go declutter my home of all those things that I keep but don't really enjoy or have grown tired of......

Joanne Benson
via canvoo.com
Barbara,
I checked out your website and really love your mixed media ocean pieces....wonderful incorporating bits of the actual scene into the painting and what a fabulous look they have!

Charlotte Herczfeld
via canvoo.com
Barbara, wonderful post! You've really helped me, thank you!

I too keep all available paintings on my walls, and the inherited stuff is in a carboard box in the garage. Yes, my walls are my gallery, for vistors to see, but a big part is that I'm such a colour junkie that my own pics make my heart lift. Which, after all, is my mission, to lift hearts of others.

Janis Tafoya
via canvoo.com
Barbara, your post is so true...
when we paint so much of out emotions and
feelings so into it that I feel other
people many times connect with the artwork
because inside they understand what the artist
was feeling at that time...we paint from the
heart.

Jo Allebach
via canvoo.com
A hospice in the Valley has many paintings and that are available for the patients to choose from to hang in there rooms. They can change them out periodically. I think that is a wonderful idea.

Not only does looking at art help but the actually painting can give us a boost up in times of depression. good topic.

Mary Pickett
via canvoo.com
My husband and I are what I call poor man/woman collectors. So far, we have not been able to buy those $3000 paintings we adore, but we buy a print if we can, or at least revisit the artwork we like (in person or online).

Our tastes usually center around local artists from places we've traveled, uplifting posters from art shows we've attended, or children's art, which is always so telling. Since we live in two very different places -- the desert and a tropical island -- we have juxtaposed the environments on our walls and our shelves, and it makes for a lively mix! And now, guess what? I'm painting, too, and so my works in progress find themselves propped up against bookshelves, leaning against chair backs, and even on the walls for a temporary exhibit.

Even though we designed our tiny house with lots of art walls, it's filling up quickly. After only four years here we're rotating our work. Keeps it fresh that way, doesn't it?

Barb Stachow
via canvoo.com
our local art club hangs a show every year in our hospital, it's a great place not only for the art to be hung, but also for sales as most people visiting hospitals find lots of "browsing time"

Marie Gruber
via canvoo.com
Barbara S:
What a great idea hanging a show in a local hospital. One of our art associations sponsors is a hospital, great idea to show our work there, I 'm sure the patient families and visitors really appreciate the view.
Barbara B.:
So many great ideas and comments from your article. Thanks again for posting it.

Marie

Sharon Weaver
via canvoo.com
I was wondering how and who tested to show which images are most soothing? I have always suspected the positive impact of beauty on the mind.

Barbara Blair
via canvoo.com
Sharon:
Interior designers, architects and others involved in the healthcare field have been doing research for several years regarding the design of medical environments, and it is on-going. It is referred to as "evidence-based design."

The Center For Health Design has more information: http://healthdesign.org

Thanks, everyone, for your great comments.










 

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