Sutter Medical Office Building, San Francisco, Art on Glass
This medical office building incorporates art directly into the walls. This process called DIRTT is gaining popularity in healthcare and hospitality. All art is printed on glass!
Sutter Breast Center, Santa Rosa, CA, Art on Curved Wall
The Women’s Breast Center operated by Sutter Health purchased 23 pieces, 8 of them custom designed for their particular space. An innovative element of this project was mounting photographs printed on aluminum on a curved wall.
Nancy Witherell is a breast cancer survivor, and the art consultant for the Center. Nancy knows intimately how having art in a room can support, ground, and visually anchor a woman’s journey through the medical system.
When the last piece was hung she took me on a tour of the facility from the perspective of a woman being diagnosed with breast cancer. Each room’s significance in the process was explained. I was shocked. It became real. I was amazed by how art can hold a space. She knew, and now I know.
Nancy Witherell is a breast cancer survivor, and the art consultant for the Center. Nancy knows intimately how having art in a room can support, ground, and visually anchor a woman’s journey through the medical system.
When the last piece was hung she took me on a tour of the facility from the perspective of a woman being diagnosed with breast cancer. Each room’s significance in the process was explained. I was shocked. It became real. I was amazed by how art can hold a space. She knew, and now I know.
Other Installations
Family Patterns, SFMOMA Artist's Gallery
Family Patterns is an integration of the art from Patterns of Growth and a meditation on family, origin, and transformation.
This interactive piece was installed at the SFMOMA Artist's Gallery as part of the show How the Light Gets In. Viewers were invited to write a prayer and attach it to the piece.
See more about this series...
This interactive piece was installed at the SFMOMA Artist's Gallery as part of the show How the Light Gets In. Viewers were invited to write a prayer and attach it to the piece.
See more about this series...