How Art Is Improving Healthcare
/With no cure on the horizon, Alzheimer's patients and their loved ones need therapies that can mitigate the symptoms of dementia. Art therapy is one of those.
Read MoreWith no cure on the horizon, Alzheimer's patients and their loved ones need therapies that can mitigate the symptoms of dementia. Art therapy is one of those.
Read MoreOn her sickbed, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis kept her books with her. She knew the comfort that her books would bring her. Because art is healing.
Read MoreArt collecting can improve your employee recruiting efforts by attracting workers from various backgrounds who might not consider your company otherwise.
Read MoreArchitect Paul Lewandowski doesn't design buildings, he designs experiences. Foremost in his mind at all times is how a person walking through his walls will feel when they do so.
Read MoreMaineGeneral has committed to using art as a healing tool. When designing the new building, the hospital opted for original artwork rather than the more typical framed posters we usually see.
Read MoreSome of the world’s best art collections are now held by corporations, giving these corporations a certain amount of prestige.
Read MoreWhen I first saw Monet’s La Pie (The Magpie) in the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, I liked it right away, although I couldn’t tell you why. Collectors are often looking for a visceral rather than an academic experience.
Read MoreMaineGeneral’s new 600,000 square-foot, $300 million facility in Augusta incorporates humanistic design from architect Paul Lewandowski and original artwork curated by Art Interiors.
Read MoreResearch shows that art with images of nature, even some abstract pieces, can have a positive impact on visitors, patients and healthcare professionals.
Read MoreArt collecting is good for public relations. More and more companies are adding art collecting to their marketing, advertising and PR budgets.
Read MoreArt sponsorship is good for companies because it shows their dedication to the world beyond business.
Read MoreThe cognitive abilities we develop by creating art are strikingly similar to the abilities our ancestors developed through tracking and running down game. Persistence hunting may have been the germ of all abstract human thought.
Read MoreArt groups and corporations are partnering more and more these days, but maybe not for the reasons you might think.
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