STAFF REPORTER
THE 2025 Stellenbosch Triennale, set to run from February 19 to April 30, will immerse visitors in the thought-provoking theme of BA’ZINZILE: A Rehearsal for Breathing.
The event invites reflection on breath as both a survival mechanism and a creative force, exploring how stillness, breathlessness, and the act of breathing can serve as powerful metaphors for cultural resilience, healing, and imagination.
Inspired by the Nguni concept of Uku’zinza, meaning to be grounded and calm in the face of adversity, the Triennale will challenge participants to consider how we navigate trauma and history while asserting our existence.
Through a series of art installations and performances, this year’s Triennale will offer a platform for artists to reflect on the relationship between breath, survival, and creative expression in times of duress.
Breathing is a fundamental act: taking air into the lungs and expelling it, exchanging oxygen for carbon dioxide. Breath manifests in various forms: puff, pant, gasp, wheeze, blow, sigh, impart, imbue, transfuse, murmur, whisper, utter. Breathing is about continuing, persisting, insisting, remaining, holding, being present, and having a place. How have our breath been disturbed, disrupted and dislocated? How have we sustained ourselves throughout these interruptions?
Breathing through States of Duress: We breathe through the duress of histories of colonialism, enslavement, apartheid, wars and on-going genocides, wounded by its impacts and suffocating under its weight. Yet, we Insist, finding ways to Improvise our breath, our Aliveness, and our existence.
Respiration: Breathing in states of duress and harm, ukuphefumla ngenxeba – to breathe through the wound. How our lungs enact somatic breathing by tracing the vascular systems of survival, cultural recovery, hope, courage, and strength in the quest to stay in the rhythm of our breath and thus life. Ukuphefumla – to breath, umphefumlo – the spirit, attends to a place of altered and interrupted destiny. The compositions of how to breathe in breathlessness are embodied in toyi-toyi, the southern Africa dance used in political protests or in voguing movements used in queer culture- the life that pulses in exaltation below our feet, opening a portal to Aliveness. This practice of breathing in situ, being in ritual with oneself, is a profound expression of insistence.
Rehearsal: A rehearsal is a session of exercise, a drill, a dry run, a practice in preparation for a ceremony. It involves repetition to align, figuring out interpretation, mapping pathways, and creating contingency plans. It is an attempt or experiment to reveal something about the world in near future time.
Improvisation, Jazz and the Black Tradition: Improvisation serves as a compass—composing, arranging, and executing without preparation. It involves off-the-cuff creativity, imagination, and skill mastery. It’s about creating rhythms and frequencies, composing notes from the haikus of our existence. Jazz, as a Black tradition of improvisation, is birthed from ancient traditions of wailing. This reappears through horn instruments that require deep breath, mimicking the throat as a vocal cord. Jazz embodies the mode of rehearsal as improvised philosophies, crafting compositions on how to breathe in breathlessness where even wailing is a form of breathing.
Exhibition making as a Rehearsal: positioning the Triennale as a rehearsal for the actions and changes we aspire to enact in the real world. This exhibition is a rehearsal for breathing — Breathing is holy. Art becomes an infrastructure of care, posing the question: if death is the given condition, how do we prepare to live?
Through this Triennale, artists say: “ We aim to map out pathways for Breathing by inviting artists to make works on site in Stellenbosch that attend to breath and breathlessness thus entering a Rehearsal as Improvised people. BA’ZINZILE: A REHEARSAL FOR BREATHING invites you to explore these themes, to engage in the practice of insistence and to find stillness and sustained breath amidst chaos.”