Art Is the Best Medicine
How art transforms the mind and body

Body Content
Can art feel like love or work like a massage? Science says yes.
Research shows that engaging with art, whether that means visiting a museum, strumming a guitar, or painting a canvas, changes our bodies and minds for the better. Making art can reduce the stress hormone cortisol, fine-tune motor skills in patients with Parkinson’s disease, and help us live longer. We are physiologically wired to experience art in a way that transforms the complex networks of interconnected systems in our bodies, quite literally expanding our brains and abilities to process the world around us. In short, science says art is good for us.
This notion is the fitting slogan behind PST ART: Art & Science Collide, the third iteration of the Getty-led regional arts initiative, which opened this fall. Getty and partner organizations across Southern California funded with Getty grants are presenting an array of thematically related exhibitions and public programs centered on links between art, science, and technology in the past, present, and imaginable future.

PST ART street ad
Goodbye Rogaine, Hello Art?
Residents of Los Angeles and the surrounding region will likely encounter PST ART posters, billboards, and Metro TAP cards asking playful questions about how art can improve health and wellness, from reducing tension and pain and calming the mind to even saving one’s hairline. The approach is light-hearted but based on real research, meetings with members of the medical community, and a national convening that included US Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy, all of which confirm the idea that art is good for us.
In a talk for a National Endowment for the Arts summit earlier this year, Murthy stated that the arts are just as important as the sciences in boosting well-being, due largely to the instantaneous positive effects they have on the nervous system. Art can help us strengthen social connections, relieve loneliness, enhance imagination and inspiration, and tap into healing effects for both the mind and body—all things Murthy says can help us build healthier and more connected communities.
Bowie 8, 2016-23, Matthew Schreiber. Reflection hologram. Courtesy of the artist. © Matthew Schreiber
Sculpting with Light: Contemporary Artists and Holography
Getty Center
Through November 24, 2024Holograms produce the magical illusion of three-dimensional objects floating in space. Works by artists including John Baldessari, Louise Bourgeois, Deana Lawson, and Ed Ruscha are the focus of one of Getty’s eight PST ART exhibitions.
emplacement, 2023, Marcus Zúñiga. Light, lens, prism, mirror. Courtesy of the artist. © Marcus Zúñiga
Open Sky
Benton Museum of Art at Pomona College
Through January 5, 2025Light and space are essential materials in this exhibition exploring artworks made to affect our bodies and how they get us thinking about the human condition and our relationship to the universe. Two site-specific performances will take place in October during the sunset evening program at James Turrell’s Dividing the Light at Pomona College, about half a mile from the Benton Museum of Art.
"Silent Echoes: Notre Dame and the Dachstein Glacier," 2022, Bill Fontana. Video still. Courtesy of the artist. © Bill Fontana
Atmosphere of Sound: Sonic Art in Times of Climate Disruption
UCLA Art | Sci Center, presented at UCLA’s Center for the Art of Performance
Through June 7, 2025Sound-based artists explore the climate crisis and its effects on the physical world through a series of events—including interactive installations, sound sculptures, live performances, and soundwalks—that seek to answer the question of how to represent climate change if its scale and complexity exceed the limits of human perception.
Go Ahead and Get Lost
So, what exactly happens when someone interacts with art?
Exposure to art and enriched environments engages not only our brains but also a vast physiological network. Our immune, endocrine, circulatory, and respiratory systems and cognitive, emotional, and higher brain functions like creativity and memory all come into play through neuroplasticity. “Neuroplasticity is the way our brains change, building neural pathways and modifying structural and functional changes in response to different stimuli,” says Susan Magsamen, MAS, executive director of the International Arts + Mind Lab at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Arts are a very powerful, salient stimuli that have the ability to change your brain and how you feel and see the world.”
Here’s how it works. When we look at visual art, what we see goes through our eyes to the back of the brain (to the occipital lobe, to be precise) to process what we are seeing. Because our bodies are mostly water, we can also feel vibrations of an artwork’s solid mass and any sounds or sensorial cues. The more time we spend viewing, and really contemplating, an artwork, the more connections our brain makes to other physiological and emotional systems, enabling us to actually feel effects on multiple levels.
Music on a Bound String No. 2, 2014, Alba Triana. Courtesy of the artist. Photography by Silvia Ros. © Alba Triana
Energy Fields: Vibrations of the Pacific
Fulcrum Arts, co-presented with Chapman University
Through January 19, 2025Vibration, sound, and kinetic energy have served for centuries as muses for artists and scientists active in the Pacific region. This exhibition highlights the work of an international group of contemporary artists who explore these often-invisible forces through sound sculptures; music based on the rhythms of seismic data; soundscapes generated from infrasound (sound beyond the range detectable by human ears) recordings of volcanoes, geysers, and blue whales; and more.
Light experiments for Olafur Eliasson’s upcoming exhibition Open at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, 2024. Photo by Henri Lacoste | Studio Olafur Eliasson. Courtesy of the artist; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York/Los Angeles; neugerriemschneider, Berlin. © 2024 Olafur Eliasson
Olafur Eliasson: OPEN
The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA
Through July 6, 2025Icelandic-Danish artist Olafur Eliasson presents a new site-specific installation designed for the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA and the atmosphere of Los Angeles. In line with his career-long exploration of light and color, geometry, and ecological awareness, the installation will playfully engage with material and immaterial qualities of the building.
Roll-out photo of Cylinder Vessel with Palace Scene, 740-800, Maya, lk style, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Purchased with funds provided by Camilla Chandler Frost. © 2017 Museum Associates/ LACMA Conservation Center, by Yosi Pozeilov
We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Through September 1, 2025Color mapped the order of the universe for Mesoamerican artists as they adorned the surfaces of buildings, ceramics, textiles, bark-paper pages, and sculptures with natural pigments correlated to spheres of Indigenous knowledge, including cosmology and the natural world. This exhibition brings to light the technology and Indigenous concepts/knowledge at play in creating a rich tapestry of color at the core of Mesoamerican worldviews.
Magsamen views the museum as an ultimate enriched environment, ideal for sparking curiosity and engaging us in discovery through exhibitions and related programming like art making, audio tours, and lectures. “Museums hold extraordinary collections that offer people opportunities to explore so many different aspects of themselves, their communities, and their feelings,” she says. “There’s light and sound, and sometimes scent, texture, and visual and tactile cues. These varied aesthetic experiences make us feel differently. We change in these spaces. They are places to behold the sublime.”
Multisensory experiences leave a stronger mark on our brains and the way we view things. They also have the power to quiet the mind, allowing us to “get lost” in art. “An immersive experience transforms us and takes us someplace else,” Magsamen says. “When you come back, you come back to the same place, but you’re never the same person. That’s what the catharsis experience of art does to you.”
Moon Ribas, Seismic Percussion, 2017. Courtesy of the artist
Blended Worlds: Experiments in Interplanetary Imagination
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Glendale Library, Arts & Culture, presented at Brand Library & Art Center
Through January 4, 2025Artists and a team of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists and engineers collaborated in this exhibition to present a vision for the future of greater connectedness with nature and the cosmos. Visit to experience sound collages, scentscapes, cyborg art, and more.
Sin Sol, 2020, micha cárdenas, Marcelo Viana Neto, Kara Stone, Aviva Avnisan, Morgan Thomas, Dorothy Santos, Wynne Greenwood, Adrian Phillips. Sin Sol, screenshot of Augmented Reality app, 2020, micha cárdenas and the Critical Realities Studio. © 2020 micha cárdenas
Digital Capture: Southern California and the Pixel-Based Image World
UCR Arts at the California Museum of Photography and Culver Center of the Arts
Through February 2, 2025An augmented reality game exploring the effects of climate change, immersive virtual reality murals visualizing the experiences of Indigenous and Latinx women of the Americas, and a trance-like moving image installation made with AI generated visions from a stereoscopic photography archive are just a few of the digital works on view in this exhibition, which follows the trajectory of the medium from the Cold War era to today.
Hand painted still from Serpentine Dance: Annabelle (1896). Courtesy of The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Color in Motion: Chromatic Explorations of Cinema
Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
Through July 13, 2025The story of color in cinema, from the scientific and technological advancements that made it possible to the way filmmakers use it as a storytelling tool, is told through film installations and posters, projectors, production cels, color charts, and iconic costumes and props. Highlights include Dorothy’s ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz (1939), original materials from Disney’s Ink & Paint Department, and Technicolor cameras.
POV: Go to a Museum and Change Your Life
Ready to expand your mind? With more than 70 exhibitions and hundreds of public programs for all ages and interests, PST ART is an ideal way to get all the benefits art has to offer. Explore exhibitions, programs, resources, and more—at Getty and all over Southern California—to help you heal, grow, relax, and engage all the senses at pst.art.