Thursday, September 30, 2010

Creativity in Hospitals






















I spent the day yesterday in the hospital as the escort to my husband who had surgery. It was a surprisingly dull day, only enhanced by the occasional visit of worry. And then there were the posters on the wall, mostly picturesque landscapes.

There was one, a fall mountainside in pastel that included an unusual orange-yellow – something like this image above. It was in fact comforting to see. The color took me out of there. Art can really be a sweet friend.

Most of the other posters didn’t skirt tacky as well, especially when they had words on the bottom like “serenity,” or in one case, “creativity.”

Perhaps only more misguided than using the word “inspiration” to describe an artist’s process is the word “creativity,” as in “I’d like to express my creativity.” It implies a state where everything you do is beautiful, worthy, perhaps even touched by a greater force; in any case, it implies a person’s better side. That’s just not how a (good) drawing comes out of the pepper mill.

That artist didn’t choose that orange-yellow thinking, “let’s be creative.” That hue was something he saw or, in all likelihood, it resulted from the reproduction process.

3 comments:

Max Stevens said...

Great post. I like the way you can take something so ordinary and mundane and turn it into something so thoughtful.

Sarah M said...

Ha! was listening to this when I read your blog:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130164248

On Art for hospitals.

Molly Stevens said...

Hey Max, thanks so much. And Sarah, funny coincidence! xx