Florence Nightingale, Art, and Healing

What does art have to do with health?

A lot has been written about the health benefits of art. But there’s a much more common implication in that knowledge than the benefits of art hanging on hospital walls.

For many of us, this time of year can be really stressful. Did you know that art can reduce stress and improve health? Florence Nightingale did. In fact, she was one of the first to recognize the health benefits of art.

We know that art moves us emotionally. That’s its only purpose, really. But why do some of us respond to a piece of art in a positive way while others respond to the same artwork in a negative way? Is it the artwork that makes us respond so differently, or is it something in us? The short answer is “yes.”

Let’s start with a story. Two boys are standing at a busy intersection with cars and busses zooming by. One of them stands at the curb edge, toes literally hanging over the curb, relishing the rush of turbulence as the vehicles pass.  The other is standing away from the curb, placing hands over his eyes, eagerly waiting for the traffic light to demand that the chaos cease.

Such it is in life: some of us relish stress/adventure; some of us hate it and will avoid it at all costs. Most of us fall somewhere in the middle of the range, but it’s safe to say that most of us treat excessive stress as something we’d rather avoid than embrace. It’s not healthy to be stressed out all the time.

I worked in the healthcare industry for over 40 years, so I have a fair sense for the misery of disease and the relief in healing. For years I’ve been intrigued by the research into the effects of art therapy (the act of making art) and art intervention (the act of viewing art) to speed recovery in patients suffering from a wide range of temporary illnesses and severe stress.

The beginnings of modern art-related healthcare goes back to Florence Nightingale. She is credited with the movement that led to placing artwork in hospitals as a way to improve healing. Nightingale wrote in her 1860 Notes for Nursing that  “the beneficial effects of art was not only on the mind, but on the body as well.” Her beliefs have since been proven time and again in a number of scientific studies.

One of those studies is something we see every day in our modern hospitals and medical clinics. What do you remember about your last visit to the doctor’s office? Do you remember the color of the walls and carpet, or do you remember the abundance of art on the walls? Most likely, it’s the art you remember.

We decorate our hospitals and clinics with art for a reason. Research shows that art improves not only mental but also physical well-being. It reduces length of hospital stays, reduces the need for certain medications, reduces blood pressure, improves patients’ satisfaction with their treatment, and reduces the cost of healthcare. Being sick is very stressful, and art helps reduce the stress, which helps restores health.

Not all art is beneficial in reducing stress. Some art actually enhances stress.

Different art styles and subjects generally evoke different feelings. A 2003 medical study showed that art having easily recognizable subjects from nature tended to restore health in patients faster. Art depicting calm or slowly moving water, verdant foliage, flowers, open landscapes, warming park-like scenes, non threatening animals like birds and pastorals, and natural scenes having nostalgic cultural artifacts are common restorative styles of art.

small cabin in the great smoky mountains in autumn
“Carter Shields Cabin” – from the Quiet of Appalachia Collection. A nostalgic homestead at the edge of a verdant forest and bathed in warming light.

Restorative subjects may appeal to those of us who are more like the kid standing well away from the busy curb, or who want to use art to create a calming, stress-free space or to realize the health benefits of art.

Just as some art calms and restores us, there are other styles of art that do just the opposite.  Patients exposed to non-representational images and images having negative icons responded negatively to treatment.  Specifically, art that is ambiguous, surreal, or abstract tends to evoke strongly negative emotions in people already experiencing stress or illness.  Abstract art triggers the analytical/computational parts of our brains, and people who are already stressed out tend to interpret such images as potentially dangerous or harmful, not helpful, to their states of health and mood.

Certain iconic shapes, forms, and tones can evoke fear, apprehension, and suspicion even if highly representational and realistic. For instance, images containing visual negative icons like dark, razor-sharp or jagged edges, or subjects that represent dangerous situations such as rapidly moving water, or fire, or cold icy scenes are often interpreted as ominous and even hair raising.

People whose nature it is to be more like the boy with his toes hanging over the edge of the curb, or those wishing to raise the level of excitement and tension in their favorite space might prefer artwork that is more abstract or visually ominous in style.

"Blackwater Falls at Full Force" by J. Riley Stewart.
“Blackwater Falls at Full Force” by J. Riley Stewart. Torrential waters, deep shadows, and a heavy sense of gravity can evoke a sense of adventure and excitement.

As a final point, researchers claim that people very often react to the same art differently depending on their current mood or underlying nature.  We can expect stressed or stress-averse people to respond very positively to restorative, calming styles of art and react negatively to abstract and visually ominous art. 

Is your art working with you, or against you?

So, are our responses to art due to the art itself or are they due to something in us? The answer is yes, it is both. Art is the original “interactive media,” and we should expect our responses to a certain style of art to change as our moods and health change.

What we now know about the health benefits of art and how it affects our moods provides a compelling reason to consider how art might affect us in our own living and working spaces, doesn’t it? How do you feel about the art you have displayed in your favorite space?  Does it calm you when you’re stressed? Does it bore you when you need a bit of excitement? Or is it just right?  If not, perhaps you’ve changed.

Have a comment about this article or want to share  your own experiences? Please leave a note below!

I’ll leave you with this reference if you’d like to read more about the health benefits of art:  https://www.healthdesign.org/chd/research/guide-evidence-based-art

Happy collecting! And I hope you have no more stress than you’d like during the holidays!

J.

Copyright, 2018, J. Riley Stewart

This article is adapted from an earlier article I wrote in 2015.

 

Looking for the positives in the aftermath- beauty in devastation

Aftermath by J. Riley Stewart an example of beauty in devastation
“Aftermath” by J. Riley Stewart

Aftermath is an interesting word. When we think of aftermath, we normally think about the immediate bad consequences of something terrible that happens to us.  But we can, instead, think farther down the road and consider something more positive, more hopeful. There can be beauty in devastation, given enough time.

As I write you this week, Hurricane Florence sits less than 24 hours off the Carolina coast. By the time you get this, you’ll know how serious it could be for you and your family. 

Our weather forecasters have thoroughly warned everyone from Virginia to Georgia  about the potential catastrophe that could hit us: high winds, torrential and persistent rainfalls, and widespread loss of power for days. We’re all on edge, understandably. 

Of course, the hurricane is on my mind this week. Sometimes, the only way I can get through the angst and worry, and the threats at times like this, is to focus on the aftermath. 

“Man can live about forty days without food, about three days without water, about eight minutes without air, but only for one second without hope.”  Charles Darwin
 

When I happened upon the scene depicted in “Aftermath,” all I saw was the profound beauty in the devastation. There was only peace in the downed trees resting in the quiet surf.  I knew the story of how this scene came to be, of course. Moments that had wreaked havoc to the coastal forest right behind me. But I also knew that without the past devastation, I would not have experienced the peace and beauty I saw before me. I was on the positive side of the aftermath.

Stay safe and stay hopeful, friends. Whether you are in the midst of the hurricane, or the forest fires, or drought, or bitter heat (or cold).  Remember it’s all temporary.

I hope you never have to suffer.
I hope in your suffering, you never lose hope.
I hope you can clearly foresee the positive side of the aftermath no matter how hidden it might be right now.

J.

Picture of J. Riley Stewart

PS. Clicking the image of “Aftermath” will take you to its place in the gallery. There you can explore the details and see how it might give you just the right place to go when you need a bit of wonder amid the devastation.

Did you enjoy this edition of Friday Foto? Feel free to share this email with someone you think might also enjoy it, and invite them to subscribe to “Under the Darkcloth.”  And please leave me a comment or ask a question by replying to this email. 

Copyright J. Riley Stewart, 2018, all rights reserved.