Home » Art aids wellbeing for hospital patients and staff

Art aids wellbeing for hospital patients and staff

Daniel Bouwmeester    January 19, 2024    4 min read   

The University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ) has teamed up with St Andrew’s Toowoomba Hospital to install an exhibition in its oncology ward to help address health and wellbeing for both patients and staff.

The exhibition, titled Undercurrent: Arts and Wellbeing, is not just for hospital patients – it’s also for healthcare workers and staff who might be feeling disconnected or overwhelmed.

Lisa Hobbs is a Brisbane-based artist who has worked as a paramedic for around 20 years and is currently undertaking a Higher Degree Research PhD through UniSQ, looking at women’s experiences in paramedicine through creative arts-based research.

Ms Hobbs said the practice of creating art and participating in this exhibition had allowed her to work through the highs and lows of such a demanding job.

“As paramedics, there are so many protocols and procedures to follow, and sometimes you can lose sight of how you actually have the best job in the world,” Ms Hobbs said.

“You can see everything from somebody being born and taking their first breath to holding somebody’s hand as they take their last breath – and everything in between – on a single day.

“My artwork ‘Escaping the Cycle’ is from a clinician’s point of view, and it’s about sometimes feeling like you’re just a cog in the machine, trying to figure out where your place is in that healthcare continuum.

UniSQ PhD candidate Lisa Hobbs’ artwork ‘Escaping the Cycle’ explores the experiences of female paramedics within the healthcare industry. Top image: University of Southern Queensland Higher Degree Research PhD candidate Lisa Hobbs (left) with School of Creative Arts Associate Professor Beata Batorowicz. All images: UniSQ.

“It was a piece that helped me reiterate that I’m not stuck as this tiny little speck; that the things I do can ripple out and affect people and their patient journey, but also their family and loved ones, and their patient journeys.”

Ms Hobbs said a big focus of her art was amplifying the voices and experiences of female paramedics.

“When I first started in paramedicine, there were very few females around. The numbers on the road now are pretty much equal, but there are still a lot of women out there who have experiences to share and potentially feel unheard,” she said.

“This piece, and this exhibition, offered the opportunity to amplify those female voices and start some of those discussions around female-specific issues in the workforce that may not have received the full amount of attention they deserve.”

Art as an experience

UniSQ Associate Professor in Sculpture (Visual Arts) and Associate Head (Research) Beata Batorowicz said the process of creating art gave people a new vehicle to express themselves in ways they may not have before – such as visual and experiential ways of storytelling.

“It’s so important to highlight the interconnectivity between arts and health and the importance of person-centred stories, as well as the way that art can influence spaces that are perhaps unconventional to where it’s usually housed – like a hospital,” Associate Professor Batorowicz said.

“Particularly here in St Andrew’s Toowoomba Hospital, it’s about looking at the power and agency that art can have as a process; there’s so much more beyond the surface of what you see.

“The way this exhibition has come together has been an interconnecting experience and a community-building experience. The people who have come together make this project, and the work is almost like the aftermath of that experience.”

The Undercurrent: Arts and Wellbeing exhibition is a collaboration between the University of Southern Queensland’s Centre for Heritage and Culture and the School of Creative Arts, along with St Andrew’s Toowoomba Hospital and several external university partners in Australia and overseas.

“We’re very thankful to St Andrew’s Hospital. It’s a wonderful initiative to exhibit some of the works here and share stories and connect in the actual space and environment,” Associate Professor Batorowicz said.

The Undercurrent: Arts and Wellbeing exhibition can be viewed on Level 1, Building 4 of the Medical Oncology Corridor St Andrew’s Toowoomba Hospital until February 14, 2024.


Learn more about UniSQ’s School of Creative Arts and Centre for Heritage and Culture.


See also: Creating an enduring record for RAAF personnel

Daniel Bouwmeester

Daniel was born in a mining town in New South Wales to Dutch and Welsh immigrants, before relocating to Logan City, where he attended Canterbury College for twelve years. He pursued his passion for music by completing a first-class honours degree at the University of Queensland (UQ), and later signed with a local record label. He has travelled the world from a young age, including a student exchange in rural France, a job working the ski lifts in Colorado, and visits to the islands of the South Pacific. After a six-year career in market research, Daniel returned to UQ to complete a Bachelor of Journalism and Arts dual degree, majoring in political science. His varied experiences at home and abroad have contributed to a passion for spreading good news while defending the truth buried inside complex societal paradigms.