Published 19 October 2025 in Press
SMF News
Woordfees: Evocative ‘Veldhospitaal’ provides healing embrace
By Casey-Lee Anthony
Published 16 October 2025 at 18:00 (SAST)
Visual Arts: Veldhospitaal
14 October 2025 at 18:00
Libertas Farm
The journey to this art exhibition is what one would expect: A dirt road leading into a field on your way to healing through artistic expressions.
The exhibition, Veldhospitaal, is laid out to resemble a hospital during the war, with various sections of the hospital in different buildings at Libertas farm.
However, it is not just images or paintings on exhibition: It is feelings and expressions, which evoke many emotions through the meanings behind these artworks.
Upon entry, you may find yourself at the “heart” as this is the biggest building, carrying most of the emotions.
The Veldhospitaal exhibition held at Libertas Farm is intended to look like a wartime hospital, with each artwork providing some sort of healing element. Each building represents the different sections of an actual hospital. PHOTO: Casey-Lee Anthony
The artists whose works fill this space have gone out of their way to make you feel what they felt in the process of making their work.
A few lip pillows on couches immediately draw attention: One zipped, another wired, representing the struggles with freedom of speech that women, especially, go through in certain situations.
Two mirrors show you which path you choose when self-reflecting, with a black mask on the right and a white mask on the left. The guide explains that this represents how we as humans decide which mask we will wear, either showing our dark side or our good side, and what we hide beneath them. One of the more interactive exhibitions is the Sanatorium. It is dark and gloomy inside, making you feel as though you have entered an actual mental hospital, sending chills down your spine.
Inside the Sanatorium section of the Veldhospitaal exhibition are interactive artworks. One room has a confessional where viewers are left alone and are allowed to release anything that has been weighing them down on a large white canvas. PHOTO: Casey-Lee Anthony
Each room has various elements to draw the viewer in. One room has two large canvases made for confessions, and viewers are given a chance to reflect in solitude and write down their own confession on the wall, allowing them to release anything they might want to let go of.
The last stop on the journey is a shed at the back of the farm, filled with hospital beds, hanging wax body parts, and X-rays that exude a clinical feeling.
Audiences are allowed to take a seat on these beds to watch performances on the stage in the middle.
Upon ending your journey through the main buildings of the Veldhospitaal exhibition, viewers can take a seat on hospital beds and relax while watching artists perform on the main stage. This space is meant to look more like an actual hospital than the rest of the exhibition. PHOTO: Casey-Lee Anthony
This exhibition is truly a healing and warm experience, unlike any other, despite its hospital-like setting with minimal lights. The artists welcome each person to engage, interact, and, most importantly, to feel.
To view the original article please navigate to the Stellenbosch Media Forum website here