"Medicine for the soul." This description of books and their power to heal inspired a broad drove of fine art throughout the Bloomberg Children's Center. Created by artists from beyond the country, the sculptures, collages, dioramas, photographs, and paintings gloat books like Margaret Wise Brown'sGoodnight Moon and East.B. White'sStuart Little. Artists selected children'due south books that were meaningful to them as inspiration for a whimsical variety of original artworks to charm and entertain children and their families.
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Title:Blue Checked Chair, 2011. Inspired byThe Cat in the Hat, past Dr. Seuss, 1957 Artist: Rolla Herman, Montclair, NJ. Location: Bloomberg Children's Center, Cardiology waiting room, 2nd Floor. Photo Credit: Rolla Herman
Championship:The Cottontails, 2011. Inspired byThe Land Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes by Du Bose Heyward, 1939 Artist: Casey Ruble, Brooklyn, NY Location: Bloomberg Children's Eye, Family Lounge, 9th Floor. Photo Credit: Casey Ruble
Title: FromStuart Footling Series, 2011. Inspired byStuart Little, by East.B. White, 1945 Artist: Thomas Allen, Coloma, MI. Location: Bloomberg Children'southward Middle, PICU Family Lounge, 4th Floor. Photograph Credit: Kris Graves
Title:Hiding from the Moon, 2011. Inspired byGoodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown, 1947 Artist: Eva Wylie, Philadelphia, PA Location: Bloomberg Children's Center, seating alcove, north, 9th Floor. Photo Credit: Eva Wylie
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Art Inspired by Nature and the Garden
More fifty artists accept use nature equally an inspiration for original artworks on permanent display in the Sheikh Zayed Tower. From mural images to detailed depictions of flower petals and rocks, nature-inspired art helps bring tranquility and softens the clinical setting for patients and families.
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Title: Detail fromToile Garden, glazed porcelain, forest and paint, 2011 Artist: Susan Graham, New York, NY. Location: Sheikh Zayed Belfry, elevator anteroom, 4th Floor. Photo Credit: Kris Graves
Title:Untitled (blueish copse), chromogenic colour print, 2011 Creative person: Alexander Heilner, Baltimore, Md Location: Sheikh Zayed Tower, elevator lobby, 12th Flooring. Photo Credit: Alexander Heilner
Title: Ane woodblock print fromColour Field Notes, series of 8 woodblock prints and 1 silkscreen, 2009 Artist: Polly Apfelbaum, New York, NY Location: Sheikh Zayed Tower, elevator lobby, Master Level. Photo Credit: Polly Apfelbaum
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Artistic Wayfinding: Color Themes and Art for Elevator Lobbies
Art and color themes help patients and visitors observe their way. The color blue was chosen for the Bloomberg Children'south Center and the color light-green for the Sheikh Zayed Tower. The moment you step off an elevator, the palette of colors volition tell you where you are.
Each elevator antechamber too features original artwork. In the Bloomberg Children's Center, art inspired past children'southward books delights our youngest patients and provides their families with memorable 'landmarks.' In the Zayed Belfry, art inspired by nature and the garden is located outside each elevator bank and displayed throughout waiting rooms, corridors, and staff work stations, bringing an element of peace to the decorated infirmary setting.
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Championship:Color Field Notes, eight woodblock prints and one silkscreen, 2009 Artist: Polly Apfelbaum, New York, NY Location: Sheikh Zayed Tower, elevator lobby, Principal Level. Photograph Credit: John Dean
Title:Polar Pink, 2011. Inspired pastThe Aureate Compass, Philip Pullman, 1995. Artist: Walter Martin & Paloma Munoz, Pennsylvania. Location: Bloomberg Children's Center, elevator vestibule, Ground Level. Photo Credit: John Dean
Championship:Zigzag Garden, 2011. Inspired pastPeter Pan and Wendy by J.M. Barrie, 1911. Creative person: Amy Chan Richmond, VA Location: Bloomberg Children's Center, lift lobby, twelfth Flooring Photo Credit: Amy Chan
Title: Weeds #4, Acrylic pigment on plexiglass, 2008 Artist: Kim Brook, Pittsburgh, PA Location: Sheikh Zayed Tower, lift lobby, third Floor Photo Credit: Kim Beck
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Fun with the Alphabet
Baltimore artist Lauren P. Adams worked with children staying at The Johns Hopkins Hospital to create an artful upper-case alphabet to exist displayed in the Bloomberg Children'southward Center. Adams taught the children a technique calledpapel picado, for creating paper cut-outs, which were transformed into colorful silkscreens past Baltimore Print Studios. Additional alphabet-themed artworks include Scott Teplin'due southAlphabet for Alphaville, a playful fix of letters featuring intricate and fanciful scenes, and Jeffrey Mitchell'sABCDEFGHI<3U.
The alphabet theme continues outside the Bloomberg Children'south Center, where the 26 colors that artist Spencer Finch used on the hospital'due south behemothic curtain wall are displayed in alphabetical order past color name.
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Title:Alphabet for Alphaville, 2008 Creative person: Scott Teplin, Milwaukee, WI Locations: Bloomberg Children's Center, virtually Radiology waiting room, fourth Floor. Photo Credit: Scott Teplin
Title:Papel Picado, 2011 Artist: Lauren P. Adams, Baltimore, MD. Locations: Bloomberg Children's Center, near Shaffer Auditorium, Main Level. Photo Credit: Clayton Allis
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