Thrivent is using its vast and prestigious art collection as one of the perks of coming back to the office.
The Minneapolis-based financial services firm that boasts $162 billion in assets under management is letting managers pick pieces to adorn their personal offices.
Art from the collection already lines halls, break rooms, the plaza, ceilings and conference rooms. The offer of artwork for offices began late last year, and so far 36 managers have met with the curation team. The goal is to have 80 offices with artwork by next year.
From there, "we're going floor by floor," said art director and chief curator Joanna Lindell. "We are trying to be a trailblazer."
Making the art so accessible "has become a really lovely way to welcome [people] into the building and into their office. So the program is growing," Lindell said.
It's been a labor of love for Lindell's team, which oversees an expansive collection of 1,300 religious masterpieces dating back 600 years, plus 500 modern showstoppers Thrivent started procuring five years ago.
While it is not as widespread as it once was, other corporations — including Target, Cargill and General Mills — have extensive museum-quality archives.
But the collections rarely grace employee's individual offices beyond the C-suite, said Ashley Wurster, vice president of interior design for the commercial real estate developer Ryan Cos.