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Selected Projects:
Florida Hospital East Orlando
Lemmen-Holton Cancer Pavilion
Memorial Hermann Heart & Vascular Institute
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Prentice Women's Hospital
Providence Regional Cancer Partnership
Sacred Heart Medical Center at RiverBend
Shriner's Hospital for Children -
Mexico City

St. John Medical Center
The Birthplace at Gaston Memorial Hospital
The University of North Carolina Women's and Children's Hospital
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center-Mays Clinic
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center-The Basic Science Research Building
Shriner's Hospital for Children


Shriner's Hospital for Children
Mexico City, Mexico

Shriner's Hospital for Children
Shriner's Hospital for Children Shriner's Hospital for Children Shriner's Hospital for Children
Shriner's Hospital for Children
Project
A 150,000 square foot new construction project.

Interior Design
Sumars Design
Challenge/Solution
Shriner's Hospital for Children-Mexico City is the new home for children from Mexico and Latin America who need orthopedic, burn treatment, or spinal cord injury rehabilitation. For this important international facility, American Art Resources was tasked with creating a world-class art program with special consideration for the culture of both Mexico and Latin America, as well as the very ill children being treated there.

The artwork for this hospital reflects a broad range of Latin communities and embraces the knowledge that many of the patients are residents of the facility, living in the hospital until treatment is complete or even to adulthood. To achieve a balance between the various ages, nationalities and degrees of medical complication of the diverse patient population, American Art Resources chose imagery with both childlike and adolescent themes, bright, saturated colors typically associated with Latin American art and culture, as well as photographic images of well known landmarks of the region and actual pictures of resident-patients placed in prominent care areas.

Art in the main public waiting area features a mobile with over 70 individually-suspended plexiglass Monarch butterflies, creating a sense of wonder for the viewer and movement in the 40-foot tall space, and a large mural depicting Hispanic children at play. The overall effect of the art program is one of hope, creativity, and culture.