hospital walls. >> these are from the 1930's. jeffrey: even, still under wraps, restored paintings from a series on alice in wonderland in new york that once adorned a children's disrepair, and will soon be publicly shown again after some 40 years. >> a lot of our pieces are not framed. they're waiting to be framed and placed in our facilities. so we store them in these bins here. so, for example -- jeffrey: well, there's a famous name. >> there's a famous name. jeffrey: this is alexander calder. an important focus now, especially in the pandemic, with art to help caregivers, not only to beautify their surroundings, but in sessions to help heal the healers themselves. >> we have a high-res image that's projected. jeffrey: this collage by david hammons, for example, is used in a program called "heart of medicine: art as therapy," in which teams of health workers first talk about the painting, as a way into their own deeper feelings, fears and frustrations on the job. >> and what would happen is, you would sit there and you'd say, "what do you see when you see this? " "i see a man and a woman in a loving embrace." but other people say, "oh my gosh, i see, you kn