Being a hospital patient is usually not a pleasant experience. For some patients at New-York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, stays were not enhanced by the view out the window: a bland white industrial wall.
The drab barrier â" erected in 2010 a stone' s throw from patient rooms on the fourth and fifth floors to hide newer mechanical systems â" presented such a dismal sight that nurses would avoid putting patients in those rooms. Whenever space became available, they would move patients from the west side, with the view of the plain wall, to the coveted east side, where light bounces off the waves of the East River and a steady stream of boat traffic passes Roosevelt Island.
But much to the delight of patients and the hospital staff, workers recently removed scaffolding in front of the wall to reveal a mural of dazzling color.
âI just think the lines are beautiful,â said Michelle Miller, a patient, as she sat in a chair with a view out her fifth-story window. âThey were finishing it yesterday, when I was moved into the room. I thought it was gorgeous.â
The 5,000-square-foot abstract painting is a vibrant series of vertical diamond and chevron shapes of blue, purple, green, and ocher â" created by Odili Donald Odita, a well-known artist with a worldwide following.
âI'm a huge modern art fan,â said Ms. Miller, 42. âI see a lot of different things in it.â
The crenulated greens and blues are like earth and water, she said, adding that she saw people interacting and shapes that reminded her of a celestial being.
âWhen you're in the hospital you have work to do, I mean getting well is your work,â said Ms. Miller, who was being treated for alcohol withdrawal. She added that a positive environment âhelps expedite your improvement.â
Hospital workers agreed that having natural light and pleasing aesthetic surroundings was an important part of caring for patients. âIt just makes such a difference,â said Caroline Olivetti, a nurse in the cardiac unit on the hospital's fourth floor.
She said she went around opening curtains to give patients a view of the hospital's newest artwork. âWe don't mind putting people over here now,â she said.
âI like it, and it's beautiful,â said Alma Mercado, 79, a Brooklyn resident who was rushed to the hospital after having a heart attack. âIt's so bright.â
Ms. Mercado is big on color, pointing out a patterned purple blouse hanging in the closet in her room on the cardiac unit. Her nails were freshly coated in a greenish blue.
Ever since the wall went up, hospital officials had been wondering how to make it more appealing; they even considered projecting an image of the East River onto it. In the end, they settled on a painting and commissioned Mr. Odita to do the work.
Mr. Odita said he was challenged by the responsibility of painting the mural, given its location. âIt was almost daunting to think of doing something at that scale and at an institution of that importance,â said Mr. Odita, in a recent telephone interview from Cape Town, where he was setting up a gallery exhibition. âI knew the com parison would always be the East River. I wanted to have and include nature without illustrating it.â
Mr. Odita, who was born in Nigeria and raised in Ohio, said his mural, âTime and Time,â took about two months to complete. His work has been featured in exhibitions in America, Africa and Europe.
Realizing that the mural would be visible by people from the infant nursery on the seventh floor to the elderly in the cardiac unit, Mr. Odita wanted it to represent the cycle of life, and give solace to viewers by helping them see their place in that cycle.
He knew that unlike gallery browsers, patients would face his painting for hours and even days. He hoped someone staring at the complex shards might âallow the color to open up other ideas of possibilities or considerations of what might be going on in their life,â he said.
Ms. Miller said gazing at the mural gave her encouragement.
âIt's inspirational for me,â she said. âIt makes me feel like I want to get out of these cream-colored walls and go back to life.â
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