Art Collection at Sevens
Whether you’re passing through a light-filled lobby, gathering with friends, or pausing to take in a new piece, art at Sevens is woven into the rhythm of everyday life. Thoughtfully integrated throughout the property, each work is curated to inspire, invite reflection, and elevate the moments in between. Designed as a natural extension of your home, the art experience at Sevens enriches how you live, move, and connect—offering quiet discovery and a refined backdrop to daily life in Mountain View.
Work by Dani Humberstone
Dani Humberstone uses the symbolism of ripe fruit to illustrate the narrative. Painting directly from life allows her to translate three dimensions into two and capture the essence or life force of the subject. Individual fruits damage easily, so as they slowly age, she tracks their gradual decay in the painting as she works. Fruit has been used metaphorically in art and language for centuries. It has helped Illustrate Fairy Tales, Mythology, the Bible, and Shakespeare. An apple in a Renaissance painting was symbolic of ‘a fallen woman’, and we still use fruit analogies to describe ourselves and our lives today. In her work, the artist also uses elements of abstraction, landscape, or line drawing to hint at a deeper narrative within and open the door to unseen possibilities beyond the immediate image.
| Co-Work Second Floor, Booth Art + Roof Lounges |

Anni Albers
Anni Albers Color Study Blue and Reds A reproduction of a 1973 color study that was designed for a wall hanging. Triangular motifs reflect the tension between order and chaos in nature’s crystalline structures.
| Co-Work 2nd Floor |

Keith Wilson
Inspired by the North Coast, exploring the abstracted relationships between colors, organic lines, irregular shapes, and blocks. Nature is best revealed and appreciated by viewing it as a dynamic living experience. The resultant takeaway is a memo of light and wind, and fog on the rocks and forests that consistently generate oil paintings that enliven and enrich, referencing the natural world. Painting is the interface or intermediate zone between the natural environment and the constructed world. The choice to focus on one or the other as a subject or inspiration is personal and not absolute. The paintings are constructed as they are being painted, often with palette knives instead of brushes. The thick paint retains tool marks and the rough edges, emphasizing the colors between. The color block paintings consist of simple colors/shapes on linen that play out parallel relationships distilled from a critical view of the built environment and from the ethereal spaces experienced in nature.
| Co-Work 2nd Floor, Conference Room |

PORTALS by Lane Rick
PORTALS by Lane Rick (Office of Things) & Galo CanizaresPortals is an algorithmic, generative artwork that explores the materiality of pixels. It is embedded into its environment as both a physical and virtual extension of its context. If the screen is the mediator between our real and imagined life, what can be said about its own material qualities and effects? Portals invite viewers to engage both the physical qualities of the screen and the pixels within it. Somewhere between a morphing cloudscape and a rhythmic lava lamp, this artwork invites multiple interpretations of what could be on the other side of the portal.Each day, the installation generates a form and colorway that changes with the season, an evolving digital echo of the real world outside.This collaborative site-specific installation was developed by Lane Rick of Office of Things and software artist Galo Canizares. Office of Things is a New York-based office dedicated to bringing moments of delight and reflection into everyday spaces. Galo’s work interrogates the emerging sociotechnical effects of code, screens, and software culture.
| Leasing Lobby |

Herbal Botanical VII
Wallpaper The "Herbal Botanical VII" design showcases a beautiful compilation of vintage botanical illustrations, reminiscent of antique prints and herbaria.
| Food Lab |

Irene Hendrick
Drawing from historical photographs and stories passed down by her mother and grandmother, the artist’s work is rooted in postwar England. While many of the figures depicted belong to a specific era, she introduces a contemporary sensibility by removing them from their original settings and placing them into new, imagined scenes—creating layered visual narratives that feel both familiar and reinterpreted.
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Sevens Wall Art by Marie Fisher
| Co-Work |
Designed by the Marie Fisher Interior Design team and fabricated by Local Language. Inspired by the art of the language and the building's address, and branding color.
Wendy Robushi
| Leasing Lounge |
The obsession with repetition lies at the root of what I do. Using hand-cut paper, I create mandala images that are simple in their execution, yet visually complex. A two-dimensional artwork with three-dimensional characteristics, viewing each artwork from a different angle gives a new perspective on each piece’s depth and texture. With words, symbols, simple shapes, colors, and sometimes pure white, by their labor-intensive nature, they are meditations in the creation, and meditative in the viewing. Each dot of the piece is hand-painted to create the desired image. The paper is archival 100% cotton, and after completion, each piece is hand-coated with acrylic medium to preserve the artwork’s integrity. Working in this circular, spiral, and repetitive manner, the creation has as much importance as the finished work.
It laces together by Chris Oliver & Madeleine Cichy
| Co-Work First Floor |
Based on an abstracted version of a lattice, the piece frames multiple visual burrows. We responded to the architectural details in the space and brought in a soft and inviting material to enhance the warmth and brightness of a conversation area.
Study for Do I by Anni Albers
| Leasing Offices |
A reproduction of a 1973 color study by Anni Albers that was designed for a wall hanging. Triangular motifs reflect the tension between order and chaos in nature’s crystalline structures, as well as Anni’s interest in Mexican culture.
Antique French Chess Prints
| Poker Room |
A reproduction of four Antique French Chess Prints restored from a late 14th-century French manuscript detailing chess strategy.
Yayoi Kusama Print
| Elevator Lobby Floor 4 |
Chosen as it references the pattern created in the ceilings in the club room and elevator lobby with the Arktura metal panels.
I Know This Bloom Will Last Forever by Ingrid and Ching
| Co Work |
You are an endless summer, for every moment in between, I know this summer will truly be ours. Let yourself reenter the familiar with a new mindset. Welcome all the new memories and set your mind free to explore. Letting the very best guide you on a new path where the unfamiliar turns into an inspiring expedition. Let the warm rays of the sun wash away all that worries you. Let the hot summer breeze touch your heart tenderly with a new direction. Feel all that you have missed, see all that has been led astray, because we deserve a new beginning, a summer that will fill us. This summer, we will all evolve a mind stretched by new experiences, be our own muse. Knowing that the sun will rise, we will try again until we fulfill our dreams. This summer is the one where we remember how far we have come. This summer is yours to have. This summer is where everything changes. This summer will be an endless one for you to flourish.
Color Cloud Diptych Pink and Orange
|Elevator Lobby Floor 2 |
Visceral exploration of color. “I’m always pursuing that feeling of being submerged and surrounded by the lush, comforting, energizing vibe color can create.”
Parametric Wall by Marie Fisher Interior Design
|Club Room |
The Marie Fisher Interior Design team designed the Parametric Wall to create a dynamic sculptural element that also functions as a stair and additional lounge space. The parametric wall becomes the backdrop to the lounge space and the pool lounge area.
Homage to the Square by Josef Albers
|Co Work Phone Room |
The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art's poster showcases Homage to the Square (1961) by German artist Josef Albers, famous for his explorations of geometric forms. With its striking bright yellow hue, the minimalist square invites various interpretations.
An Albers Sunrise By David Grey
|Co Work Small Meeting Room |
Bridging the gap between creativity and mindfulness by emphasizing the profound connection between inner awareness and visual design. Inspired by global audiences to see design as a dynamic dialogue with the self and the environment.
Marble Run
|Game Room |
A mix of art and fun creates a focal point for the game area.
Awakening by Stavros Kotsakis
|Leasing Lounge |
Awakening visualizes Victor’s use of Galvanist principles to animate human and animal body parts. This collection of upcycled materials–both natural and manmade–awakens through a thread of electric blue light. The materials are diverse in texture, appearance, and composition, just as the Creature is made from a variety of human and animal parts. Each addition interacts with light in a unique way, adding its own radiance to the collective whole. Like Victor, Stavros joins these disparate artifacts into something wholly innovative and harmonious.
Golden Gates by Josef Albers
|Leasing Offices|
A reproduction of a 1973 work that is part of Josef Albers' seminal Homage to the Square series, a two-decade exploration of color interaction and his most influential artistic achievement. With mathematically arranged concentric squares in varied hues, this series—spanning over two thousand works—remains a foundational influence on color theory and art education today.
Woven Sculpture by Mariella Motilla
|Club Room|
Mariella Motilla’s woven sculptures are quiet, emotional landscapes made from fiber and intention. Each piece begins not with a pattern, but with a feeling, guided by stillness, collaboration, and a deep respect for the handmade. Through layered textures and imperfect beauty, her work weaves stories that honor time, color, and the human touch. These sculptures are not just meant to be seen. They are meant to be felt, inviting the viewer into a moment of reflection, warmth, and connection.
Floral composition by Madeline Trait
|FoodLab Dining|
Madeline Trait’s floral compositions are expressions of movement, emotion, and natural rhythm. Each arrangement is guided by intuition and a respect for organic form, allowing flowers to bend, reach, and speak in their own language. Through layered color, texture, and thoughtful placement, her work captures fleeting beauty in a way that feels both intentional and alive, inviting the viewer to pause, breathe, and feel the quiet poetry of nature.
Semaforo, Pieced Mandala, & Blast 2 by Wendy Robushi
|Mail Room B, 1st Floor Elevator Lobby, & 2nd Floor Elevator Lobby|
Wendy Robushi’s Semaforo, Pieced Mandala, and Blast 2 are meditations on repetition, rhythm, and visual focus. Built from thousands of hand-painted dots and precisely cut paper, each work appears simple at first glance, yet reveals rich complexity through pattern, color, and depth. The circular, repetitive process becomes a visual mantra, blending manual labor with digital precision. As light and angle shift, these two-dimensional surfaces take on a sculptural presence, inviting the viewer to slow down and experience their layered texture and quiet energy.
Dream Sequence #2
| Co-Work 2nd Floor, Small Meeting Room |
Dream Sequence #2" Contemporary Minimalist Abstract Capricorn Press Print, playful biomorphic forms with a classic modern design palette.
Noon Daydream Diptyche by Kelly Knaga
| Co-Work 2nd Floor, Small Meeting Room |
Kelly Knaga is an artist, illustrator, and muralist living and working outside of Chicago. Knaga’s work is about the intersection of nature and art, exploring human relationships to Mother Nature and the land. Her works investigate flora, landscapes, and our relationship with the environment by layering shape, image, color, and story. Knaga is also a design educator and co-founder of Art and Action Community Lab.
Color Study for Camino Real by Anni Albers
| Co-Work 2nd Floor, Small Meeting Room |
A reproduction of a 1973 color study that was designed for a wall hanging. Triangular motifs reflect the tension between order and chaos in nature’s crystalline structures, as well as Anni’s interest in Mexican culture.
Tile Mosaic
| Wellness Spa Courtyard |
A tile mosaic inspired by a Plein Air painting of the California hills
Light and Space Art Movement Inspiration
| Fitness Center|
The fitness center was influenced by the Light and Space art movement with the use of color, light, and transparency.