Experimenting With Art And Health

I’m an artist and innovator in the field of art and health, so I like to experiment a lot.

Recently ARTPLACER.com, an art placement company I really enjoy, added patient rooms to their excellent selection of mockup photos. Today my happy evidence-based design art hangs in so many different physical settings, but I have always told people I never considered it a good fit for the inside of a hospital patient’s room.

With ARTPLACER’S new mockup photos, here was my chance to really experiment within the inside of patient rooms, so I did.

When I create evidence-based design art, I think back to when I needed two major surgeries in different parts of my body in less than 30 days. Through this experience I realized there were so many different stages involved—such as the in-hospital pre-operation stage, the in-hospital post-operation stage, and the at-home longterm recovery stage. I also realized how my needs were different during each stage.

Right after surgery, while in my patient room, I felt that my entire body had been seriously assaulted and traumatized—and it had. The hospital, the staff, and my two doctors were all excellent, but that’s just what happens when a human body needs major surgical operations.

While inside my patient room, what I needed most was a total relief from any additional stimulation or trauma. Most of my evidence-based art is strategically and deliberately designed to not stress, but it is also designed to stimulate.

The trick—or I should say the skill—as an evidence-based design patient room artist is to create a work of art that is lovely according to the evidence-based design guidelines but is also one that does not cause too much brain stimulation. The art should be lovely without impact.

Placing different pieces of my art in ARTPLACER’S new hospital rooms, I was able to do some experimenting and here are some things I discovered.

Very much to my surprise, some of my florals did very well, even in a darker patient room. They were lovely and uplifting and fit comfortably in this room without creating too much stimulation to the brain.

I was even more surprised to see that even my bolder evidence-based design florals succeeded. They clearly delivered happiness and cheer without causing any stress or trauma.

Here are some of my other evidence-based design paintings that I thought might just work inside a patient room. I have always felt that my ideal hospital patient room should have carefully selected works of real art on the wall. Bland, boring, stereotypical designs actually frighten me. It’s as if this art makes a kind of heart monitor flatline sound. For me, art is hyper visual but it’s also always full of music and sound.

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Did You Know This About Our Health And Art?

Did you know that some evidence-based designs and art are no longer categorized as just decorative? It’s the difference between designing for wall decoration to designing for health in a physical environment.

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.

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Did You Know This About Health And Art?

Did you know that Evidence-Based Design nature scenes are restorative?

Did you know that Evidence-Based Design nature scenes are restorative?

With all the talk today about Evidence-Based Design—what is it?

Evidence-Based Design is a field of study that emphasizes using credible medical and scientific evidence to influence design. Evidence-Based Design uses ideas from environmental psychology, architecture, neuroscience, behavioral economics, and more.

According to Ulrich and Gilpin, research suggests that nature art, or art with views or representations of nature will promote restoration if it contains—

  • calm or slowly moving water

  • verdant foliage

  • flowers

  • spatial openness

  • park-like settings or Savannah-like properties

Over the years, I have tried to create location appropriate art using these (and other) evidence-based design principles and guidelines.

Here are three paintings where the backgrounds are of a stretch of beach on Highway 23 in Northern Michigan. (Local scenes are also favored in evidence-based design.) I’ve taken some criticism over the years for not painting with enough tradition and realism. Even though I am a natural-born abstract artist who also creates evidence-based design art because it has the potential to help restore human health and happiness, I don’t mind. The huge pink clouds next to the pretty blue skies are in this first painting because that’s just how amazing the skies can be in this geographic location. (evidence-based design guideline: local scenery)

Print of Morning Majesty

Also, keeping in line with Ulrich and Gilpin’s evidence-based guideline of calm or slowly moving water, Lake Huron is amazingly still on most warm weather days. I deliberately keep my brushstrokes long and flowing. This creates the calmness, which creates a restorative/de-stressing effect. For water high-interest but not water high-focus, I blend the paint into a variety of colors.

People are often so surprised when they arrive at this location on Highway 23 because—from the horizon line to the shore—the water is often a dark blue, then medium blue, then a lighter blue, then an aqua color. The aqua color comes from an abundance of limestone. (evidence-based design: calm or slowly moving water)

Print of Beautiful And Happy

Print of Lake Huron Lovely #2

In many of these paintings, I also introduce the evidence-based guidelines of flowers and verdant foliage because people in this area love flowers. (evidence-based design: flowers and verdant foliage)

In the warmer months, many towns in the Great Lakes region burst with downtown flower festivals, downtown flower baskets, and flower sales.

This area, already a water lovers destination, also becomes a super happy flower lovers paradise.

This painting, Hope’s Sunshine, is a view of Lake Huron from flower-beautiful Mackinac Island

 
 


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.

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Creating Joy In Abstract Art

Is it possible to create a modern work of abstract art that triggers the brain to create feelings of joy?

Is it possible to create a modern work of abstract art that triggers the brain to create feelings of joy?

Personally, I’m convinced of it. What is my reasoning? Buyers tell me all the time how happy my art actually makes them feel.

What’s the secret? Is it super talent or artistic genius or is it training and certification in Evidence-Based Design? I believe it’s a combination of talent and training. Based on established medical and scientific research, I know there are relationships between design factors and healthcare outcomes, especially when people view nature. I create and sell an abundance of nature scenes (see my websites dorotheasandra.com and the landscape category of thewonderfulworldofdorotheasandraart.com) but I also love to create and believe in abstract art as health and happiness sources.

I’m a member of The Society of Experimental Artists and also hold the EDAC (Evidence-Based Design Accreditation and Certification) designation, so I have a keen interest in trying new and different ways to create art.

Joyful Movements by Dorothea Sandra

In this triptych titled Joyful Movements, I experimented with using acceptable “evidence-based design” colors (soft and gentle) and combining them with “the abstract essences” of nature’s wind, rocks, sand, and water. Solely as an abstract work of art, Joyful Movements holds it own. The colors are amazingly beautiful and the palette knife movements create deep interest and intrigue.

My goal when designing this was to see if I could connect “evidence-based design” guidelines with “abstract art” techniques, so I stuck with “the essences” of nature—rather than identifiable shapes—for the purpose of keeping the composition free of too much impact and stress. I wanted this piece to be beautiful, but I also wanted it to do more for us. I wanted it to be gentle and soothing and to remind of us of nature’s amazing healing powers.

I wanted the brains of viewers to be reminded of nature’s water and sand and wind and rocks rather than to be touched (impacted) by them. Many of today’s neuroscientists have conducted studies on our brains and art. Professor Semir Zeki, a neurobiologist from the University of London, discovered in his studies: “When a person views art they find beautiful, it triggers an immediate release of dopamine into the brain—a chemical related to feelings of love, pleasure, and desire.”

Pierre Lemarquis, a French neuroscientist, concluded: “Art of all kinds acts on our brains in a multi-faceted dynamic way. Neural networks are formed to achieve heightened complex states of connectivity. Art can sculpt and even caress our brains.”

My overall desire for Joyful Movements was to achieve a work of art with moving nature essences that evoked in us feelings of happiness and healing.

Although this painting was created after 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design was published, here is an excerpt about designing with water from my book. There’s more to just painting water and nature elements when it comes to meeting all the evidence-based design standards.

For me to create “happy” art, I remember that the medical/scientific “evidence” matters.

“In evidence-based art, compositions with water should provide healing. Calm water scenes are preferred, while gushing rapids or crashing ocean waves should be avoided. Even a trickling water fountain might create negative experiences for people with full or nonfunctioning bladders.” (Distinctive Art Source, “Healthcare Art Bloopers,” 2023)

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Creating Joy In Abstract Art

Is it possible to create a modern work of abstract art that triggers the brain to create feelings of joy?

Is it possible to create a modern work of abstract art that triggers the brain to create feelings of joy?

Personally, I’m convinced of it. What is my reasoning? People tell me all the time how happy my art actually makes them feel.

What’s the secret? Is it super talent or artistic genius or is it training and certification in Evidence-Based Design? I believe it’s a combination of talent and training. Based on established medical and scientific research, I know there are relationships between design factors and healthcare outcomes, especially when people view nature. I create and sell an abundance of nature scenes (see my websites dorotheasandra.com and the landscape category of thewonderfulworldofdorotheasandraart.com) but I also love to create and believe in abstract art as health and happiness sources.

I’m a member of The Society of Experimental Artists and also hold the EDAC (Evidence-Based Design Accreditation and Certification) designation, so I have a keen interest in trying new and different ways to create art.

Joyful Movements by Dorothea Sandra

In this triptych titled Joyful Movements, I experimented with using acceptable “evidence-based design” colors (soft and gentle) and combining them with “the abstract essences” of nature’s wind, rocks, sand, and water. Solely as an abstract work of art, Joyful Movements holds it own. The colors are amazingly beautiful and the palette knife movements create deep interest and intrigue.

My goal when designing this was to see if I could connect “evidence-based design” guidelines with “abstract art” techniques, so I stuck with “the essences” of nature—rather than identifiable shapes—for the purpose of keeping the composition free of too much impact and stress. I wanted this piece to be beautiful, but I also wanted it to do more for us. I wanted it to be gentle and soothing and to remind of us of nature’s amazing healing powers.

I wanted the brains of viewers to be reminded of nature’s water and sand and wind and rocks rather than to be touched (impacted) by them. Many of today’s neuroscientists have conducted studies on our brains and art. Professor Semir Zeki, a neurobiologist from the University of London, discovered in his studies: “When a person views art they find beautiful, it triggers an immediate release of dopamine into the brain—a chemical related to feelings of love, pleasure, and desire.”

Pierre Lemarquis, a French neuroscientist, concluded: “Art of all kinds acts on our brains in a multi-faceted dynamic way. Neural networks are formed to achieve heightened complex states of connectivity. Art can sculpt and even caress our brains.”

My overall desire for Joyful Movements was to achieve a work of art with moving nature essences that evoked in us feelings of happiness and healing.

Although this painting was created after 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design was published, here is an excerpt about designing with water from my book.

“In evidence-based art, compositions with water should provide healing. Calm water scenes are preferred, while gushing rapids or crashing ocean waves should be avoided. Even a trickling water fountain might create negative experiences for people with full or nonfunctioning bladders.” (Distinctive Art Source, “Healthcare Art Bloopers,” 2023)

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Today’s Mood Busting Art

Is it possible to bust through a bad mood with art?

Garden Holiday by Dorothea Sandra, EDAC

As many of you know, we live in “interesting” times. So many people today are stressed or sad or deeply troubled by something or someone. I like to use my art to fight against this by creating credible pieces that bust through these moods and create upward movement feelings of happiness and hope and joy. Using well-researched guidelines, I like to reach inside the brain through art and help shift a negative mood into something positive.

From the 1960s until today, serious researchers with very serious studies…from different countries…from different multidisciplinary fields have converged to create a new field of art called Evidence-based Design. According to the National Library of Medicine at the National Institute of Health, “Evidence-based design is scientific analysis methodology that emphasizes the use of data acquired in order to influence the design process in hospitals. It measures the physical and psychological effects of the built environment on its users.”

Today, evidence-based design isn’t just for hospitals. It’s for all of us. It is for many of the places humans go. What is my role in all of this? A very small one—but I think an important one. Today my art hangs in hospitals, businesses, organizations, and homes. Using my artistic talents and evidence-based design training and certification—just as I did in this triptych art called Happy Garden—I very deliberately and very strategically create happy, happy art for today’s built environments.

People often ask me where I get my inspiration for this style of painting I call Bubble Art. These photos of flowers come from just two of my yards in Northern Michigan. I live in a super clean, healthy environment and inspiration always seems to be all around me—everywhere I seem to look. Nature is a truly powerful healer. When we can’t be out in it, putting art on our walls that captures nature’s fun and beauty often helps.

(I keep 100 percent pesticide-free yards with many bee and butterfly friendly plants. The bees this years are plentiful. I have even seen up to 8-10 bees on one bush.)

In a Garden Holiday, I used my evidence-based knowledge to select the cheerful background color. I painted the flowers in soil to give the artwork a rooted to our life-giving earth feel. Flowers and stems are never similar or boring in nature, so I gave this work an abundance of fun-filled stem twists and turns, pops full of flowery color, and many hints of humor.

If you would like to learn a bit more about evidence-based design and see how I applied it to my art, my new book, 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design, is available through Amazon.


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Bubbling With Happy Smiles

Today’s art to make us smile.

Creating happiness is a gift, and I love to use my artistic talents to help others smile.

Bubbling With Happy Smiles by Dorothea Sandra

What Happens To Our Brains On Art?

The research results are in: according to The Telegraph in the United Kingdom, “Looking at a gorgeous painting, sculpture, or other artwork, increases blood flow to the brain by as much as 10 percent—the equivalent of looking at someone you love.”

According to professor Pierre Lemarquis, the French neuroscientist who wrote L’art Qui Guérit (Art That Heals) “art of all kinds acts on our brains in a multi-faceted, dynamic way. Neural networks are formed to achieve heightened, complex states of connectivity. Art can sculpt and even caress our brains.”

Isn’t This Exciting?

My goal was to create a work of art that would trigger our brains for fun and laughter and smiles. There’s enough reality in the soil to ground the painting, while the stems take off playfully up and down and around and side to side. The colors are bright and cheerful and full of dynamism and diversity.

So many people have told me this piece instantly busts through bad moods and makes them smile inside. Others have said the flowers communicate that one is perfectly beautiful even when super odd or different or not traditionally formed.

So much of my art is influenced by nature’s water movements and flowers. Here is Bubbling With Happy Smiles, as well as other pieces, on display at the Art In The Loft Gallery in Alpena, Michigan.

People often think of small northern towns as boring. This “authentic arts town” busts with summer activities. Festivals, art, music, water activities, cruise ships docking, amazing natural areas, wildlife, and truly friendly and fun (and open minded) people makes Alpena, Michigan a place I spend lots of time visiting. I’m in two galleries there, and I love it!

Here are some photos of one of the marinas and just one of the many colorful side alleys and back parking lots.

In such a fun and friendly “authentic” place, it’s so easy to get inspired to create happy art. Many of the paintings in my book, 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design, were influenced by this clean, healthy, and super beautiful area.

This book is not a marketing push. (There are no painting prices published.) It is visually pleasing, as well as an informative journey into a new art field based on science and medical studies called Evidence-based Design.



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Welcome

Welcome to the wonderful world of Dorothea Sandra Art.

YOU HAVE ARRIVED AT THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF DOROTHEA SANDRA ART!

BLOG #1—From Death To Life

A number of years ago I got diagnosed with two potentially life-ending illnesses. I was surprised when most family, friends, and people I had known for years politely dumped me. Essentially, I was left on my own and alone (with the exception of one brother) to go off into the wilderness and die somewhere.

Well—not only did I not die—I ended up creating a super fun, happy, and absolutely amazing new life. Welcome to the wonderful world of Dorothea Sandra art. Today I’d like to share the power of abstract art and photos and excerpts from my new book 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design.

Power In Action by Dorothea Sandra

Power In Action is a bold abstract. It reflects the awesomeness and diversity of real power. Done mostly with palette knives, it has intense movement and edge, while still maintaining balance, beauty, and grace. I really like the gold touches. They are there to show that having an abundance of wealth is a fun thing.

I was trained as a child to paint in oil, but today I find super high quality professional-level acrylic paint to be so much more fun. I love the ease in which it goes on, and the colors can be truly amazing. In this painting you can see the influence of the late Roger William Curtis, the famous New England seascape artist. My earliest teachers were trained by him. I still remember wiggling my toes in the damp Gloucester sand while listening to the paint mixing instructions for creating sea spray, water depth, and ominous rocky shores.

In addition to my love of abstract art, I also wrote a book called 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art, Evidence-Based Design. My brush with death had opened my eyes to the importance art can have on the brain, which helps with health, healing, and happiness. I got trained and EDAC (evidence-based design) certified through the Center For Health Design, and it has been one happy artistic adventure after another ever since.

Did you know evidence-based designs use credible medical/scientific studies in their design guidelines? Here is Section 1.1 from my new book.

IS EVIDENCE-BASED DESIGN SOMETHING TOTALLY NEW?

“If you asked the sixth-century BCE Greeks of Epidaurus, they might take you to one of the most celebrated healing centers of the classical world—the Asclepieion hospital. In their hospital, patient rooms faced eastward. Why? It is believed the rooms were intuitively designed and placed toward the sun to promote healing.

Many centuries later, many movements from different countries came together in the 1970s to create a new field called Evidence-based Design.

Who are the people whose forces created this new discipline? Doctors, scientists, architects, interior designers, psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists, and many, many others.

DAY ONE of 100 DAYS OF HAPPY HAPPY ART

The Healing Window, 36”x48”

I’m known as many things in the art world—an artist of hope, an artist who modernizes traditional woodsy compositions, a New England trained artist, a Great Lakes artist, and a 21st century experimental artist.

As a 21st century experimental artist, I like bringing together totally new or different things. Bringing together today’s health, while also thinking of the ancient Greeks, Day One of 100 Days Of Happy Happy Art features a painting of a window view a patient might see from a hospital room.

This painting’s background is of Little Traverse Bay from the back parking lot of the McLaren Northern Hospital in Petoskey, Michigan.

As I composed my images, I imagined I was inside one of the McLaren Northern patient rooms looking out. The flowers are modern and cheerful and uplifting, but I wanted to honor the achievements of those before us by giving elements within the composition a more rough, ancient Greek Asclepieion feel to it.

 


100 DAYS OF HAPPY HAPPY ART, EVIDENCE-BASED DESIGN is now available.

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