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A new study led by King’s College London, followed 50 adults aged 18 to 40 between July and September 2025, who viewed original works by Manet, Van Gogh, and Gauguin at The Courtauld Gallery in London. The same participants were also shown reproductions of the work in a controlled environment. Participants were monitored using digital wrist sensors and saliva samples to measure heart activity, skin temperature, and hormone and immune markers.

The results showed that cortisol—the body’s primary stress hormone—fell by an average of 22% among the participants who viewed the original artworks, compared with 8% for those who saw reproductions. Levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines (stress-related proteins) dropped by nearly a third in the gallery group.

“From a scientific perspective, the most exciting outtake is that art had a positive impact on three different body systems—the immune, endocrine, and autonomic systems—at the same time,” Dr. Tony Woods, researcher at King’s College London, said in a statement. “This is a unique finding and something we were genuinely surprised to see.”

Over 100 art studios and free wellness at the Pendleton Art Center Open House (Valet parking is $10).

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