Art With Love, Art With Beauty, Art With Power

Dorothea Sandra, BA, EDAC, an Evidence-Based Design Artist

Evidence-based Design

Evidence-based Design. What does it really mean?

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What does it mean when someone claims to be Evidence-based Design Certified?

I’m a super fan of the Center for Health Design’s internationally recognized EDAC (evidence-based design accreditation and certification) program.

Why? The program is arduous and legitimate and it awards a credential to “individuals who demonstrate an understanding of how to apply an evidence-based process to the design and construction of all settings that contribute to health, safety and wellbeing including measuring and reporting results.” (healthdesign.org)

Who are the people who go for this certification?

Architects, Designers, Healthcare Executives, Healthcare Providers, Academics, Engineering and Construction Professionals, Product Manufactures, and artists like me who REALLY CARE about designing—using methodology rooted in medical research for the health, healing, and happiness of others.

I got really interested in the subject after seeing lots of art and art experts claim that paintings with dripping blood and badly deformed items and unhealthy looking human figures and shocking colors and compositions were okay to promote as art for health and healing. It wasn’t okay with me, so I looked for a program that would teach/influence/inspire me to create art for the health, safety, and wellbeing of others.

Here’s an Evidence-based Art video I created as a little promotion. The painting is called Oh, Baby Blue! I Love You!

Life Threatening Illness and Evidence-based Art

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Have you ever had a life threatening illness? Most of my life was major illness free and then—WHAM!—I ended up in the hospital with 2 major operations within 30 days. It was no picnic, and it took me over a year to recuperate.

From this experience, I learned on a life-or-death level about fears of dying, overcoming physical trauma, fighting for hope, and the need for real evidence-based art. Real evidence-based art uses design principles based on “real medical studies” for human health and healing.

I went on to become EDAC (Evidence-based Design Certified), and often when I paint, my goal is to create beautiful, happy art that soothes and relaxes—but also stimulates. In the recovery process, it’s important to heal (rest and relaxation) but also essential to stay upbeat and in motion (stimulated) for recovery.

Here’s another evidence-based art video for you!

 
 

Let's Relax With Evidence-based Art

art, art advisory, art collector, art consultant, art curator, art for healthcare, art for interior design, art gallery, art heals, art therapy, artforhealthcare, artforinteriordesign, contemporary art, contemporary artist, Dorothea Sandra Art, EDAC, Evidence-based Design, female painter, floral art, happy art, healing art, hospital art, Michigan artist, modern art for saleDorothea Sandra, BA, EDACComment

Take a moment. Take a break. Enjoy a little relaxation with a one minute video with evidence-based art. No sales. No hype. It was created just for you! Evidence-based art uses medical studies in the design process.

The painting in this video was created using Evidence-based Design research. Multiple credible studies now show connections between certain types of art and positive health outcomes.

Wishing you the very best!

Dorothea Sandra, BA, EDAC

New Joy! Joy! Floral Happiness by Dorothea Sandra

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People often call me a painter of HOPE. They tell me all the time how happy my floral art makes them feel.

I was the July/August 2021 featured artist at the Thunder Bay Arts Council Gallery in Alpena, Michigan. (By the way, this is a lovely gallery with many talented local artists.) During this time, these florals just flew out the gallery’s two big display windows—to Michiganders..to people from New England…Arizona…California—sometimes 5 at time.

What’s the secret?

I strive for happiness—not beauty—when painting this type of evidence-based art. Of course, the painting needs to be beautiful, but more than this, each work must create in its viewers/owners a sense of being loved or liked or made to feel really happy. The art has to GIVE MORE THAN ART, and it needs to keep giving and giving and giving.

The paintings in these videos were created using Evidence-based Design research. Multiple credible studies now show connections between certain types of art and positive health outcomes!

Do Communities Benefit From Evidence-based Art?

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I tell everyone I’m really more of an abstract artist, but because there is such a need in today’s world, I create (and sell lots of) Evidence-based Art for the health, healing, and happiness of others.

For most of each year, I like to live remotely along one of the Great Lakes in a small Northern Michigan town. Whenever I can, I try to share my evidence-based art freely with people in this town and the surrounding communities.

Here’s a little video clip I created and boosted on Facebook to let everyone in the Northern Michigan counties (and Mackinac County) know they are most welcome to visit a local business (with a really big heart) to see walls and walls of high quality, beautiful evidence-based art.

The viewing bench I bought has also been a really big hit with all ages.

Are the communities in my area benefiting from viewing all this evidence-based art? Based on the number of people who come in to buy a little artistic something of good cheer for themselves or as a gift, and based on the number of people who just want to come in and walk around (or sit on that viewing bench and stare), I think sharing my national/international evidence-based art on an ongoing basis has been a really big community hit!

My absolute favorite moments are when kids and teens come in. Often one or two of them will stop for the longest time in front of one of the paintings, and I can see from the intensely analytical look on their faces, they’re trying really hard to figure out just how I did this and just how l did that. I consider my art a gift—which should be shared!

(To see my ABSTRACT ART website, click on the link at the bottom of this post or go to dorotheasandragallery.com.)

How To Buy Art For Health And Healing

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Really…how does one buy art for health and healing? This is a legitimate question. Gone are the days (and thank goodness) when any misguided art critic or consultant could dismiss healthy and healing art as just another flighty idea or fancy. There’s just too much evidence—if one wants to do the research—to support buying “real art” that also improves our health and promotes healing.

An Artist, EDAC Certified, and A Business Plan

art, art advisory, art collector, art consultant, art curator, art for healthcare, art for interior design, art gallery, art heals, art therapy, contemporary art, Evidence-based art, floral art, happy art, healing art, hospital art, landscape art, modern art, EDAC, Evidence-based DesignDorothea Sandra, BA, EDACComment

People don’t normally associate artists with business plans—but I have one—and my business plan makes EDAC a foundational part of it.

“EDAC stands for Evidence-based Design Accreditation and Certification.  It is a program that has established new standards for individuals who are using an evidence-based design process for healthcare building projects.” (which includes art)

Some people say EBD (Evidence-based Design) is an “old hat” concept. They say design professionals have been using research to guide their decisions for years and years. 

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This is true, and in the 6th century BCE, the Asclepieion hospital in Ancient Greece, which included patient rooms facing eastward to promote healing, may have perhaps used some form of “old hat” research. Today, however, Evidence-based Design has a new focus which not only considers evidence but “strong” evidence.

Other critics say EBD employs “cook book design” strategies. They say decisions made using the Evidence-based Design process focus too much on evidence and not enough on experience or imagination. I once freely created wild abstract art where colors of death (black or white) and pours of blood (red) and the hideous or representational woes of society came together in an image—BUT NOW I DON’T. 

I made a choice—especially since today’s “evidence” shows credible connections between design (which includes art) and positive health outcomes. My “chosen” artistic style/brand is a mixture of landscape and an abundance of flowers, which falls directly inside the type of art connected to positive health outcomes. 

If anything, I think using Evidence-based Design has made me a better artist—not just for myself but for the health, healing and happiness of others.