Our Mental Health is Important in these Times. Here's How Creativity Can Help.

As the state of Maryland and many other states nationwide hunker down to help prevent the spread of COVID-19, we at Artists Circle have been thinking about how art can play a roll in times of crisis. While practicing social distancing and self-isolating is good for the public’s physical health, we know that many people are feeling the weight of this pandemic mentally and emotionally, whether in the form of worry for loved ones, worry about one’s own health, or just plain loneliness. Over the next few days, we’re going to be posting about different ways to use art and creativity to healthily cope with these feelings.

Shanthi Chandrasekar, Time-Information, located outside the new Prayer and Meditation Room at Suburban Hospital

Shanthi Chandrasekar, Time-Information, located outside the new Prayer and Meditation Room at Suburban Hospital

At Artists Circle, we believe in the healing power of art—both creating it and consuming it. Many psychologists and mental health professionals agree; in fact, art therapy is growing increasingly popular. According to a post by Resources to Recover, an organization geared toward providing families with issues of mental illness with different ways to care for themselves and their loved ones, art therapy is “an application of the visual arts in a therapeutic context,” and can include “art journaling, sketching, making collages, [and] sculpting with clay,” to name just a few therapeutic creative practices. Resources to Recover states that art “stimulates the release of dopamine … [which] basically makes us happier.” Harvard Health Publishing would echo that opinion; in their article “The healing power of art,” they state, “Studies have shown that expressing themselves through art can help people with depression, anxiety, or cancer, too.”

In our recent installation at Suburban Hospital, we tried to draw on artists whose work would bring a sense of calm and ease to the space. Take, for example, the work of Shanthi Chandrasekar.

Shanthi Chandrasekar, Spacetime-Fields

Shanthi Chandrasekar, Spacetime-Fields

Shanthi Chandrasekar, Space-Energy

Shanthi Chandrasekar, Space-Energy

These pieces, located outside the hospital’s new Prayer and Meditation Room, imbue the hallways with a pensive tranquility. In her artist’s statement, Shanthi says that her art is based on “scientific and philosophical [inquiry]”—the perfect balance to strike as this art ushers people into a room where they are invited to be introspective and serene, in spite of any stress they might be feeling about what is happening in their lives outside of that space.

Linn Meyers is another artist we have worked with in the past whose art attends and attests to the healing qualities of the art-making process. Dr. Jordan Amirkhani, Professional Lecturer at American University, describes Linn’s work as “a record of the constellations of decisions, mistakes, tensions, and interventions that adhere to each mark [on her paintings].” Composed of hundreds of individual curving lines, her paintings often resemble wood grain, or skin, or wind currents—images that are in and of themselves grounded, and were crafted out of groundedness.

Linn Meyers, Ink on Paper

Linn Meyers, Ink on Paper

Linn Meyers, Ink on Paper, installed at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter, and Hampton

Linn Meyers, Ink on Paper, installed at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter, and Hampton

We hope that looking at these works of art will help bring you a sense of calm or joy in these stressful times. We will be posting more about ways to use art to help ease your way through the coming weeks.

Artists Circle is proud to employ people who are expressive in a multitude of ways: working at Artists Circle are visual artists, musicians, poets, gardeners, even jewelry makers. Head over to our Instagram @artistscircle to see posts on how members of our staff engage in creative pursuits, and how and why these pursuits are fulfilling for them.

Another Teammate: Meet Sarah!

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Artists Circle has been growing nonstop these days. We recently hired on Sarah Martin to be our Special Projects Curator, and we couldn’t be more thrilled to welcome her to the team. At Artists Circle she’ll be developing concepts for our clients, assisting with installations, and delighting us all with her sharp wit! Here’s some info about who Sarah is when she’s not wearing her Special Projects Curator hat.

Where did you grow up?

I am a 5th generation DMV native. I grew up in Silver Spring but moved to Gaithersburg when I was 13. I went to a small private school for K-12 where I made some of my greatest friends to date, including my husband.

What are some things you love?

I love plants. I have over 50 in my house and will continue to buy more. I love lipsync battles. Stand up comedy. Horror movies. Charcuterie boards. And of course, all thing art!


What are your pet peeves?

My kitchen being messy. I renovated the whole thing myself and love it when it sparkly and clean.

What do you like to do on the weekends?

Home improvement projects like painting a wall,  installing a new light fixture or building a raised flower bed. Flashlight dance parties with my kiddos. Going outside and hanging in my porch swing with a cocktail. Thrifting with my husband.

What’s one little-known fact about yourself?

Here are two. I am 6 feet tall and once in college I tried out for America’s Next Top Model. I was on the Puppet team in middle school and am still really good at puppeting (especially when combined with lipsync battles).

You’d better believe we’ll be asking for a puppet show one of these days! Welcome to the team, Sarah.

Artists Circle at Suburban Hospital

Artists Circle was lucky enough to source and install art for the recently opened wing at Suburban Hospital. The new facility, which opened on Friday, February 21, is now home to gorgeous, calming art that we hope will improve the experiences of both staff and visitors alike, including collages of photos of the natural world in Bethesda, Maryland, taken and created by Artists Circle’s very own Austin Bristor. Our art complements the timeless, open design of the building by Wilmot Sanz architects.

Suburban’s art committee was made up of entirely women—and it just so happens that most of the artists whose work we installed and many of the contractors who worked on the project were women, too! Artists Circle has been proud to work with such an incredible team of women thinkers and workers, especially the day after International Women’s Day.

This wall sculpture in the main atrium is made of 70 individual pieces of hand blown glass sculptures.

This wall sculpture in the main atrium is made of 70 individual pieces of hand blown glass sculptures.

This bright, botanical painting hangs in one of the waiting areas in the lobby.

This bright, botanical painting hangs in one of the waiting areas in the lobby.

Meditative, nonrepresentational, tranquil paintings felt like the best choice for the hallway leading to the new Prayer and Meditation Room.

Meditative, nonrepresentational, tranquil paintings felt like the best choice for the hallway leading to the new Prayer and Meditation Room.

These large-scale collages designed by Artists Circle’s Austin Bristor brighten up the halls near patient rooms.

These large-scale collages designed by Artists Circle’s Austin Bristor brighten up the halls near patient rooms.

One of the most exciting pieces that Artists Circle got to commission specifically for this installation was the Small Things mural, also known as Water, Wind, and Sun. We’ve never been so excited about medical waste: this three-part series was made of medicine, vial, and syringe caps, as well as IV hangers and connectors, all embedded in resin. The triptych was meant to represent how each small act of compassion and every interaction between caregivers, patients, and families makes a big difference to patients and families, and how those deeds add up to create a beautiful spirit of generosity and healing within the hospital.

One of the highlights of the creation and installation process was when Artists Circle threw a sorting party for the nurses who collected the caps over two years. The nurses came to our barn sweet barn with boxes and boxes full of the caps, then sorted them all into like categories so that the artist who would eventually create the mural would know exactly what she could create.

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Nurses gather in the barn at Artists Circle to sort through medicine, vial, and syringe caps, and IV hangers and connectors, for the creation of the Small Things mural.

Nurses gather in the barn at Artists Circle to sort through medicine, vial, and syringe caps, and IV hangers and connectors, for the creation of the Small Things mural.

Once we had an idea of what materials were available to us, Artists Circle’s in-house design team generated the following mock-ups of how we wanted these pieces to look. We went for a bright and eye-catching, cheerful and soothing abstract feel with lots of implied movement, and references to the natural world, as you can see below.

Mockups of the Small Things Series generated by Artists Circle’s in-house design team.

Mockups of the Small Things Series generated by Artists Circle’s in-house design team.

Artists Circle then commissioned these pieces from local artist Billie Coursey-Lookingbill, who usually creates her art out of old windows, sea glass, or broken and crushed shells.  Of creating these pieces, Billie says, “When Katie first showed me their concept, I was a little fearful that I wouldn't have the technical skill to work on such large projects, but I was immediately moved by the use of the small pieces of plastic, used everyday in the care of patients,  that would normally be discarded…. I felt inspired by and connected to the concept of using ‘medical trash,’ and was almost giddy when I saw the large bins filled to the top with all kinds of colors, shapes and sizes!” Billie also had a sense of humor as she fabricated the series; she notes that the concept and title Water, Wind, and Sun is loosely based on the name of the band Earth, Wind, and Fire. (“There wasn’t a lot of brown to include much ‘Earth,’” Billie says.)

Once the pieces were completed and installed by Austin and Dan, members of AO’s installation team, AO’s Jack and Katie attended the dedication ceremony for the pieces, along with Billie. There, Billie was able to talk about how she created these pieces in the final weeks of her father’s life, when she witnessed the kindness of nurses and CNAs over and over as they cared for him. “[It] was a precious gift,” she said in her speech. “I’m so deeply thankful to the men and women who answer their calling to enter the nursing field.”

Water by Billie Coursey Lookingbill Repurposed Plastic Vial Caps in Resin

Water by Billie Coursey Lookingbill
Repurposed Plastic Vial Caps in Resin

Wind by Billie Coursey Lookingbill Repurposed Plastic Vial Caps in Resin

Wind by Billie Coursey Lookingbill
Repurposed Plastic Vial Caps in Resin

Sun by Billie Coursey Lookingbill Repurposed Plastic Vial Caps in Resin

Sun by Billie Coursey Lookingbill
Repurposed Plastic Vial Caps in Resin

Detail

Detail

Detail

Detail

Artist Billie Coursey-Lookingbill (L) and Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer LeighAnn Sidone (R) stand next to the Small Things mural at the dedication ceremony, February 21, 2020.

Artist Billie Coursey-Lookingbill (L) and Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer LeighAnn Sidone (R) stand next to the Small Things mural at the dedication ceremony, February 21, 2020.

You can watch a video to learn more about the Small Things mural and its significance here.

Artists Circle was so grateful to be able to carry this project out from initial design concepts to installation. We are thankful to Billie, Austin, and all the artists whose work now hangs in the new building. We were happy to be able to enliven and brighten the space for the patients and staff at Suburban Hospital, especially the nurses and CNAs that care so excellently for patients and their families. At Artists Circle, we believe that art—both creating and viewing it—can be profoundly restorative. As Billie put it, “Sharing our own creativity with others, and appreciating and connecting to the creativity in others, leads to healing and encouragement in both us and them.”

Meet Clare!

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When last we left our heroes here at the Artists Circle news page, we had just hired Austin Bristor as our Installer and Project Assistant. In November, we hired on another team member: meet Clare Hogan, our new Associate Art Consultant. She’ll spend her time at AO sourcing art for clients, making sure everything is in order for installation days, and managing our Instagram. Here’s a little more about her.

Where did you grow up? I’m from Chevy Chase, Maryland, but I lived in Ann Arbor, Michigan for a little while.

Why did you live in Michigan? Because I was getting my MFA and doing a fellowship in poetry at the University of Michigan!

Whoa! Cool! I think it is in fact pretty cool! Thank you!

So, are you writing a book, or something? In theory, yeah, but what a weird thing to say. My book isn’t really about anything in particular. It’s a book of poems. I also write nonfiction.

Can I read any of it? I have a very small amount of work published online! Here’s a poem. There are a couple others out there that you can find if you sift through Google.

Do you have any pets? Yeah, I have this totally delightful dog named Lucky who reminds me a lot of a little crab. He’s cute, but he’s neurotic, and he’s really stinky. He loves getting his cheeks scratched. He’s old and sick. Poor thing.

What’s a ‘did you know’ fact about yourself? Can I give you three? I make really good eggs, and my friend Colin gave me this recipe for pickling red onions that changed my life, and my favorite thing to do is talk on the phone. Wait—four: I drive a Toyota Corolla that I named Patsy Cline. I love her a lot.

Welcome to Artists Circle, Clare!

Public Art in Alexandria

We are THRILLED to share some installation photos from our recently completed public art project in Alexandria. Our services were enlisted by Gables Residential to commission and install a unique and site-specific sculpture outside of a development at 530 First Street in Alexandria, VA. After vetting dozens of artists, we selected Tom Fruin, who is known for his large-scale public sculptures using salvaged glass and Plexiglas to create odes to local building structures and neighborhood histories. The image below, entitled ‘Watertower’ is one of his iconic artworks, adding a colorful and historically relevant addition to the Brooklyn skyline.

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Fruin conducted site surveys and consulted historical documents when creating his design for the Alexandria project. The site is located right next to the Potomac River as it winds its way into DC. To pay homage to the River’s historical significance as a transportation and commerce route, Fruin made the canal structure the integral theme of his design.

Historical reference: stacked stone canal wall from the 1800s.

Historical reference: stacked stone canal wall from the 1800s.

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The vertical structure is an eye-catching piece to be viewed in the round as visitors approach and leave the development while hearkening back to the site’s history.The Plinth sculpture is a distillation of the historic "stone walls" built to shore up the area. The irregular square shapes can be read as stones while the entire structure can be seen as a cross-sectional quarried piece of earth with veins of sediment. Illuminated from within, the glowing structure is a contemporary monument to land on which it sits.

Steel sculpture frame in Fruin’s fabrication studio in Brooklyn.

Steel sculpture frame in Fruin’s fabrication studio in Brooklyn.

Panels prior to on-site assembly.

Panels prior to on-site assembly.

Raising the sculpture on-site with some panels installed.

Raising the sculpture on-site with some panels installed.

Inside the sculpture. Interior lighting will cast a gem colored glow across the plaza at night.

Inside the sculpture. Interior lighting will cast a gem colored glow across the plaza at night.

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Installations Galore!

Our lead installer, Dan, has been working on a plethora of projects in recent months. Dan has several repeat clients who rely on him for custom artwork and framing jobs. Some of these projects involve framing and mounting of portraits, swapping out plaques, or creating interesting wall layouts for graphics or series.

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Our installation projects vary anywhere from hanging a single piece in an individual’s office, to installing several hundred pieces within a few days’ time. Although we normally only post our large scale projects on this blog (i.e. public art, sculpture, and custom art), the our installation business continues to thrive and grow!

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If you or you business needs assistance with artwork transport, storage, or installation, Dan is your guy! You can reach him at dan@artcfa.com.

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Happy Thanksgiving from Artists Circle!

It’s our favorite time of year! A time for family, friendship, and an opportunity to reflect on all of the many blessings in our lives. Too often we find ourselves caught up in the workplace whirlwind, noses to the grindstone (…or computer screen), trying to churn out our work as quickly and efficiently as possible that we forget to take a step back and really reflect on the hard work that we’ve done. This past year, we’ve been able to collaborate with architects, designers, artists, and clients from Los Angeles, to Dallas, to Chicago, to Boston, to Fort Lauderdale, and back home in Washington, DC. We’ve worked on everything from small framing projects, to temporary rotating artwork displays, to acquisitions for permanent collections, to large scale public art installations. See below for a review of some of our favorite projects from the last year. We are so grateful to everyone that we’ve collaborated with this and every year to bring these projects to life. From Artists Circle, to you - HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

Recent Project Locations

Recent Project Locations

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Interior Murals with a Story

Last week we wrapped up an interior mural for our friends at The Goldstar Group. Their new office in Bethesda was designed by our other friends at American Office. This mural was hand-painted using 35 screens and over 100 layered images of DC old and new. Being a commercial real estate investment firm, the client wanted to feature iconic scenes from around DC to capture their primary market.

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We are DROOLING over the detail & texture here! A 20th century map of DC layered underneath a photograph of the client’s new office in Bethesda, all sealed underneath The Goldstar Group’s logo?! Yes, please!

We are DROOLING over the detail & texture here! A 20th century map of DC layered underneath a photograph of the client’s new office in Bethesda, all sealed underneath The Goldstar Group’s logo?! Yes, please!

DC old and new can be seen in this portion of the mural. Imagery includes the new development down at The Wharf, the iconic ceiling of the DC metro system, and various retail storefronts and signs from around the city.

DC old and new can be seen in this portion of the mural. Imagery includes the new development down at The Wharf, the iconic ceiling of the DC metro system, and various retail storefronts and signs from around the city.

Viewers can travel through the DMV’s past, present, and future in this mural. Many thanks to The Goldstar Group and American Office for bringing us on board!

Fun Installation on a Friday!

This morning, Dan and Olivia completed an installation for a client down at The Wharf. In their kitchen/lounge area, we installed a custom, laser cut & powder-coated map of the Southwest Waterfront neighborhood. The sculpture, which Olivia designed in-house, stands about an inch off of the wall so that the shadows create an interesting reflection on the wall and on the marble counter-top below.

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Further back in the dining area, Olivia sourced 3 wood & resin maps. Not only do they visually tie the room together with the wooden floors, but they also have a direct relationship to the firm’s work. The client is a bipartisan lobbying firm, so the maps depict the street grids surrounding Capitol Hill, the White House area, and the Navy Yard.

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Last but not least, we placed a large panoramic photograph of the Tidal Basin in the Potomac Conference Room for… well, obvious reasons!

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We are absolutely loving all of the activity at The Wharf these days. This client is lucky enough to be right in the thick of it. Looking forward to more projects in that area!

Public Art Feature in the New York Times

Last week, the New York Times published a feature on new public artworks that are popping up across New York City. Public art benefits everyone who comes into contact with it; it benefits the artists by providing an opportunity to showcase their work, it benefits the public by harboring a sense of community and place-making, and it benefits the developers who commission public art by increasing foot traffic in the surrounding area. We are personally in love with the sculpture below, which was installed at a children’s hospital in Manhattan. A giant, 24 foot tall dalmatian uses laser-like focus to balance a real, true-to-size (!!!) taxi cab on its nose. The artist has said that “besides wanting this work to be playful, he intended it “to have assets we hope to find in our doctors: focus, confidence, patience and sweetness.” 

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We love the nuanced approach to the commission above. Public art is incredibly powerful in that viewers often discover new elements in the artwork each time they encounter it. At first place, passerby might think the sculpture is just cute, whimsical and playful. But upon further reflection, the piece invites them to consider the focus, intention, and confidence displayed by the dog.

Below are some of Artists Circle’s current public art projects - check out the captions for the story behind each one!

Sculptural proposal for a soundwall at a development in Rockville, MD. The artist uses recycled aluminum panels to create dimensional wall sculptures that can be installed in interior or exterior spaces. This piece balances Rockville’s present with …

Sculptural proposal for a soundwall at a development in Rockville, MD. The artist uses recycled aluminum panels to create dimensional wall sculptures that can be installed in interior or exterior spaces. This piece balances Rockville’s present with the past - the old barn harkens back to the town’s history as a farming community while the contemporary construction alludes to Rockville’s new center as a business and cultural hub of the DMV.

‘Discovery’ creatures in progress for the Chevy Chase Land Company. Inspired by origami, these sculptural animals are made of recycled, museum-quality metals and will be installed throughout the shopping center. Some large, some small, the sculpture…

‘Discovery’ creatures in progress for the Chevy Chase Land Company. Inspired by origami, these sculptural animals are made of recycled, museum-quality metals and will be installed throughout the shopping center. Some large, some small, the sculptures are intended to be discovered by shoppers for a bit of whimsy to be enjoyed by young and old alike.

Glass tower on proposal in Old Town, Alexandria. The artist was inspired by a lime kiln found in archaeological surveys of the site. The bright, colored glass will provide a contemporary take on a historical object.

Glass tower on proposal in Old Town, Alexandria. The artist was inspired by a lime kiln found in archaeological surveys of the site. The bright, colored glass will provide a contemporary take on a historical object.