Over the long span of history, every culture on Earth has expressed itself through the arts. Much more recently, science has been able to explain just how music, dance, theatre, the visual arts, and so many other modalities can improve our physical and mental health and wellbeing. Health, Medicine & Society is helping to deepen human understanding of how we can use the arts to advance individual and community health and elevating storytelling as a tool to educate and engage diverse audiences.
Videos, Podcasts & Webinars
Video: Performance and discussion with Joshua Roman, cello soloist, composer, and individual experiencing long covid, interviewed by author and physician Atul Gawande
Public Health Grand Rounds
October 31, 2024
Cellist Joshua Roman and renowned author and physician Atul Gawande discuss the effects of long covid and how they have affected the formation of Joshua’s debut solo album Immunity, which includes many of his own compositions.
Joshua takes us on a journey through his creative life, including performing excerpts from his new album, followed by a discussion with Dr. Gawande to give insight on what it means to live as a professional artist with long covid.
Video: Renée Fleming discusses Music and Mind: Harnessing the Arts for Health and Wellness
Public Health Grand Rounds
April 15, 2024
Acclaimed singer Renée Fleming discusses the curated collection of essays in Music and Mind: Harnessing the Arts for Health and Wellness about the powerful impacts of music and the arts on health and the human experience. Moderated by Eric Motley, Deputy Director, National Gallery of Art
Video: Your Brain on Art
Aspen Ideas Health
June 23, 2023
The arts are not a luxury or an escape, but a vital tool for thriving physically, mentally, and spiritually. Neuroscience explains how art changes the body, brain, and behavior and practitioners are demonstrating its role in advancing health and wellbeing. Learn about the cutting-edge field of neuroarts from the authors of the New York Times bestseller, Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us. Moderated by Walter Isaacson, Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross are joined onstage by legendary jazz musician Fred Johnson to bring home the transformative power of art.
Video: Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us
Public Health Grand Rounds
March 20, 2023
Join Public Health Grand Rounds at the Aspen Institute for a book talk on Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us, with authors Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross and moderated by Eric Motley, Deputy Director of the National Gallery of Art. Your Brain on Art shares the new science behind humanity’s evolutionary birthright — to make and behold art and its power to transform our lives. What artists have always known, and researchers are now proving is that arts, in all its forms, amplify physical and mental health, learning and flourishing and build stronger communities.
Webinar: Progress Report: Building the Field of Neuroarts
NeuroArts Blueprint
March 13, 2023
Dedicated to strengthening the essential role that the arts can play in advancing health and wellbeing, neuroarts has captured the attention of an expanding network of researchers, practitioners, arts groups, health providers, and other public sector and private sector organizations. The NeuroArts Blueprint initiative is honored to serve as a hub for the growing body of knowledge they are generating, and to act as a catalyst to inspire more. A newly released Progress Report updates the collective efforts to implement the recommendations and action steps detailed in that foundational document.
Video: Music on your Mind: The Power of Music to Educate and Heal Us
Health, Medicine & Society
November 9, 2022
Join us as we honor and celebrate Marin Alsop, 2022 Harman/Eisner Artist in Residence, who talks about the power of music in conversation with Susan Magsamen, founder and director of the International Arts+Mind Lab at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and co-director of the NeuroArts Blueprint initiative. Award-winning television and documentary producer James Blue moderates the panel.
Webinar: Art as Medicine
Aspen Ideas Health
June 24, 2022
Science can now explain what many of us have long understood intuitively—the arts can make us healthier and happier. By blending those rigorous findings with more research, well-funded arts practices, cross-disciplinary education, and prudent policy, we can add new tools to the healthcare arsenal. Renée Fleming, world-renowned soprano and arts and health advocate, Francis Collins, acting co-chair of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, and Sheila Johnson, CEO of Salamander Hotels, explore the role of art in health and healing. Jon Hamilton, National Public Radio Science Desk correspondent, moderates the conversation.
Webinar: The NeuroArts Blueprint: A Plan to Build the NeuroArts Field
NeuroArts Blueprint
March 22, 2022
Learn how the NeuroArts Blueprint initiative is cultivating the neuroarts ecosystem to advance human health, strengthen communities, and promote culture change. To realize its potential, neuroarts must become a fully recognized field of research and practice, with educational and training pathways, dedicated funding, supportive public sector and private sector policies, effective leadership, well-crafted communications strategies, and infrastructure capacity. A look at how the Blueprint is fostering connections among stakeholders, what success looks like, and how to get involved.
Podcast: How Art Can Heal the Brain
NeuroArts Blueprint
March 18, 2022
Early evidence suggests that art can ease a host of brain disorders, from Parkinson’s disease to PTSD. But treatments that rely on music, visual arts, poetry, and other creative pursuits have until recently been backed by a limited amount of rigorous evidence. National Public Radio’s Aaron Scott and Jon Hamilton talk about the NeuroArts Blueprint initiative and its commitment to deepening knowledge about how the arts can be used to heal the brain.
Webinar: Aspen Words presents Michael Lewis & Malcolm Gladwell in conversation
Health, Medicine & Society
May 19, 2021
Literary luminaries Michael Lewis (Moneyball, Liar’s Poker) and Malcolm Gladwell (The Tipping Point, Blink), discuss Lewis’s new book, The Premonition: A Pandemic Story. This taut, brilliant nonfiction thriller pits a band of medical visionaries, working under the radar, against the official response of the U.S. administration to COVID-19 outbreak.
Video: Music to Our Ears (and Brains): The Arts Are Good for Your Health
Aspen Ideas Health
April 27, 2021
World-renowned soprano Renée Fleming, and Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health when this video was made, discuss the power of music and other arts to improve health. After describing initiatives that are driving promising research forward, including Sound Health and the NeuroArts Blueprint, they conclude their conversation with a special musical duet.
Webinar: A Conversation with the cast and director of the documentary film Collective
Health, Medicine & Society
February 1, 2021
Collective tells the story of journalists who uncover widespread corruption after a deadly fire at a Romanian nightclub. Film director Alexander Nanau, journalist Catalin Tolontan, and Romanian Minister of Health Vlad Voiculescu discuss this award-winning documentary at an event hosted by HMS, Aspen Institute Romania, and the Aspen Institute’s network of international partners. Margot Sanger-Katz of the New York Times served as moderator.
Webinar: Music and Mind LIVE with Renée Fleming: NeuroArts Blueprint: A New Frontier
NeuroArts Blueprint
September 15, 2020
Renowned soprano Renée Fleming’s announced the launch of the NeuroArts Blueprint initiative on her webinar series Music and the Mind and interviewed the project codirectors, Susan Magsamen, executive director of Johns Hopkins University’s International Arts+Mind Lab, and Ruth J. Katz, HMS executive director.
Video: Public Health Grand Rounds performance and discussion with Ben Lerner
Public Health Grand Rounds
November 6, 2019
A lunchtime performance and discussion with Benjamin Lerner, musical prodigy, piano rap artist and opioid addiction survivor. The great-grandson of Irving Berlin (composer of “God Bless America”), Lerner credits his continued recovery to his ability to use word and song to express his emotional struggle. His novel hybrid genre of music combines piano compositions rooted in classical music theory with rap that journals his experience with addiction. By sharing his personal journey, Lerner hopes to help others who are struggling.
Publications
Article: Renée Fleming Neuroarts Investigator Awards
NeuroArts Blueprint
December 5, 2023
Renée Fleming Foundation and NeuroArts Blueprint Initiative are proud to announce a groundbreaking program to encourage collaborative neuroarts research between early career artists and scientists. The Renée Fleming Neuroarts Investigator Awards is now accepting applications.
Article: How Music Affects Your Brain
NeuroArts Blueprint
April 28, 2023
Blueprint Co-Director Susan Magsamen explores how music has the power to transform and enhance our brains in a piece for Time magazine’s ideas and psychology column.
Report: Progress Report: Building the Neuroarts Field 2022-2023
NeuroArts Blueprint
February 2022
Dedicated to strengthening the essential role that the arts can play in advancing health and wellbeing, neuroarts has captured the attention of an expanding network of researchers, practitioners, arts groups, health providers, and other public sector and private sector organizations. Learn how the NeuroArts Blueprint is advancing research, practice, education, policymaking, advocacy, leadership, and communications in this emerging field.
Report: NeuroArts Blueprint: Advancing the Science of Arts, Health, and Well-Being
NeuroArts Blueprint
December 2021
This action plan of bold, culture-changing steps partners science, the arts, and technology to advance human health and wellbeing and strengthen communities around the globe. Building on five core principles and findings, it puts forward a set of recommendations to expand research and practice, develop educational and training pathways, encourage dedicated funding and policies, promote effective communications strategies, and grow leadership and other infrastructure capacity. Spearheaded by the International Arts+Mind Lab at Johns Hopkins University and HMS, the goal is to create a sustainable neuroarts ecosystem.
Report: Alzheimer’s Disease and Music Engagement Economic Impact Analysis
NeuroArts Blueprint
December 2021
This analysis, undertaken by KPMG for the NeuroArts Blueprint, estimates the economic impact of having people with Alzheimer’s disease engage with music. Based on its modeling assumptions, KPMG calculated a potential contribution of $830 million to GDP in the United States alone. In tackling that work, analysts developed a first-of-its-kind model that can be applied to many other art modalities, diseases, and outcome measures.