Our beautiful chapel
In 2018, St Mary’s commissions a new set of unique Stations of the Cross, painted by South African artist, Joseph Capelle. To date, Capelle, a committed Christian, has created several sets of Stations of the Cross which are housed in various churches.
Capelle’s use of bright colours and abstract style are what drew us to his work. To the traditional set of 14 Stations, we asked that Capelle add a 15th Station, depicting Christ’s resurrection. We also asked Capelle to emphasise the role of women in his work, and to depict Christ and the people around Christ in such a manner that people from various backgrounds and cultures would be able to find themselves within the artworks.
During December 2018, our beautiful, new set of Stations of the Cross is installed inside the chapel, where they can be viewed, beginning at the bell pull next to the vestry door and ending with the last Station behind the piano next to the angel stained-glass window.
Our new and unique set forms the third set in our school. In the 1990s, then headmistress, Judith Brown, installed a set of prints of the Stations, identical to those found at St Mary’s, DSG, in Pretoria. These replaced a black and white set that had been in the chapel for many years. Both of these sets have been hung on the upper level of the Senior School original buildings, above the Senior School reception, between the Accounts offices and the Ross & Darragh classrooms.
- Revd Claudia Coustas, Chaplain, 2019
These paintings are intentionally two-dimensional. I like to think of them as modern-day icons. The surface area is very important to me so I use flat colours, textured areas, hard edges and lines. The cross in all these stations is suggested in an abstract manner.
These stations show not only the physical sufferings of Jesus but also His mental and psychological anguish, experienced during His passion. Faces and hands are the main form of expression and are frequently painted in unnatural colours, depending on the mood that I wish to create in the station. The colours I use are my own expression of emotion.
My hope is that the viewers will put their own interpretations to the stations and will be able to deepen their meditation. Some of the images will shock but I believe that this will lead to a deeper understanding of the redemptive suffering of Jesus.
- Joseph Capelle, 2019
Click here to download The Stations of the Cross in pdf version

The First Station: Jesus is condemned to death

The Second Station: Jesus takes up his cross

The Third Station: Jesus falls for the first time

The Fourth Station: Jesus meets his mother

The Fifth Station: Simon of Cyrene helps Jesus to carry the cross

The Sixth Station: Veronica wipes the face of Jesus

The Seventh Station: Jesus falls for the second time

The Eighth Station: Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem

The Ninth Station: Jesus falls for the third time

The Tenth Station: Jesus is stripped of his garments

The Eleventh Station: Jesus is nailed to the cross

The Twelfth Station: Jesus dies on the cross

The Thirteenth Station: Jesus is placed in the arms of his mother

The Fourteenth Station: Jesus is placed in the tomb

The Fifteenth Station: The Resurrection