Did you know that some evidence-based designs and art are no longer categorized as just decorative?

Based on study after study, evidence-based designs and art have become part of the Environment Of Care.

“The Environment Of Care is the understanding that the experience someone has in a healthcare delivery system is a function of six components: physical environment, layout and operations systems, people, concept, and implementation.” (Integrating Evidence-Based Design, Practicing The Healthcare Design Process, The Center For Health Design)

Evidence-based designs are successful when they consider the entire Environment Of Care experience. It’s the difference between designing for just decoration (Wow! That color will look fabulous with this sofa!) to designing for health in a physical environment (Wow! That evidence-based design with those colors will look fabulous with this sofa AND they will benefit my health by meeting the guidelines of evidence-based design!).

A World Health Organization report, based on evidence from over 3,000 studies identified “prevention of illness” as a major role for the arts. What were some of the beneficial links between the arts and health?

  • The psychological benefits were enhanced self-efficacy, coping, and emotional regulation.

  • The physiological benefits included lower stress hormone responses, enhanced immune function, and higher cardiovascular reactivity.

  • The social benefits between arts and health showed reduced loneliness and isolation, enhanced social support, and improved social behaviors.

  • The behavioral benefits indication from these studies were increased exercise, an adoption of healthier behaviors, and skills development. (WHO, 2019 Report on Arts and Health)

Today, study after study shows benefit after benefit of evidence-based designs.

I am a member of The Society Of Experimental Artists and I like to experiment by taking credible scientific/medical study results and translating them into works of art. Although I have created quite a bit of art using the established evidence-based design principles and guidelines, not too much evidence-based design creation and analysis has been done with abstract art.

Here are some of my earliest experimentations into the world of evidence-based design and abstract art.

Mastering Life’s Complexities got sold to a gallery director the first day I had it on display at the gallery.

I love to donate art to raise money. Power And Gold I donated to a Crooked Tree Arts Center fundraising event in beautiful Bay Harbor, Michigan.

Power In Action is a painting I just love to have around. The colors are so deeply amazing and they move. I put it for sale on my website (https://thewonderfulworldofdorotheasandraart.com), but I haven’t turned it over to any gallery. I think I’m hoping it never sells. LOL!

With all three of these paintings, I was going after strong (at least by evidence-based design standards) POWER AND MOVEMENT WITHOUT CAUSING ANY STRESS.

 
 

Take a peek inside my new book, 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design.

There’s even a chapter on neuroscience and art.

Dorothea Sandra, BA, EDAC

Dorothea Sandra is a national and international commissioned artist. Her art has appeared in museums, galleries, newspapers, and magazines. She is the author of 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design.

https://thewonderfulworldofdorotheasandraart.com
Previous
Previous

Did You Know This About Our Brains And Art?

Next
Next

Did You Know This About Art And Health?