[CATHERINE OPIE] Sometimes people are coming to the hospital and they're camped out here in their loved one's room for four or five days and for them to be able to get up and walk around for a moment while they're having some kind of test or medical procedure done and engage with original work is really magical. And also some people don't actually want to go to a chapel in a hospital. You know, you do need places that you're allowed to go and have moments and thoughts and feelings that aren't necessarily just within this one place of worship. [JOANNE COHEN] We're looking for art that going to be engaging where people really...I mean, you see them interacting with the art and the engagement, it's palpable. It's doing something--it's activating in some way. Our mantra here is: "Medicine cures you and art heals the spirit." And we firmly believe that, that it's going to help you get through whatever moment you might be encountering. [OPIE] So this is the corridor and the piece will be the full length of the corridor. And then, one of the things that I actually loved upon my first visit here was that you end with a fractured landscape with that roof. And I thought that was really interesting, and there was a moment of poetry for that-- it fractures the landscape. It creates this other kind of horizon line. And that will end up being referenced of what's happening in here. I'm hoping that if somebody is having a hard time that they could come here and possibly sit and have this kind of ethereal moment with the photographs. My primary intention is--with this body of work, in making it-- is that you could come here over a 20-year span of time and the photographs will trigger the same thing that it would to you driving through your old hometown. [MAN] Is this Edgewater? [OPIE] Yeah, that's Edgewater. [LAUGHING] You're right. [MAN] And you're on the pier? [OPIE] Yeah, I'm on the pier. [MAN] This one is my favorite one. [OPIE] I'm glad. You guys are working here now, you get to live with them. It'll be a permanent installation. [MAN] Oh yeah, this is my hallway. I was going clean it, but y'all was here, so... [LAUGHING] [OPIE] That's good! Often, my work, I feel, only serves one aspect of society, so to speak. It's like, my work is expensive. People who want to live with it, they have to pay a lot of money for it. There's all of those realities that actually bother me to a certain extent. But there is also a place that, fundamentally, in the core of my being, that I believe art needs to be public. I don't want this to be installed anywhere else. I'm not going to be doing an exhibition beyond here, so if people want to see this, then they have to come here to see it. And so that's important to me, because it's conceived for this place, it's being designed for this space specifically, and if you want to experience it, you've got to come to Cleveland.