One of Los Angeles’ most unusual new art experiences is taking shape in the heart of Westlake, near Historic Filipinotown and Lafayette Park. May 27th through at least July 31, 2026, a former wing of St. Vincent Behavioral Health Campus has been transformed into Hospital of Emotions, a large-scale immersive pop-up that turns a real hospital setting into a living museum of feeling, memory, and imagination.
With the tagline “A place to heal your heART,” the exhibition blends architecture, storytelling, and contemporary art into an experience that feels both visually striking and emotionally reflective. Rather than simply displaying artwork on walls, the project invites visitors to move room by room through an environment designed to spark curiosity, connection, and conversation.
Spanning four floors, the exhibition features more than 70 artists and nearly 80 transformed hospital rooms organized around eight emotional “departments,” including joy, love, fear, anger, hope, sadness, gratitude, and resilience. Former ER spaces, patient rooms, nurses’ stations, and corridors become part of the artwork itself, creating a fully immersive journey that uses the building’s original character as a powerful creative backdrop.
The participating artists come from a wide range of creative disciplines, including illustration, street art, installation, architecture, set design, and visual storytelling. Featured names include Miran Nudell, David Otis Johnson, and Javiera Estrada, alongside dozens of other emerging and established creators whose work turns each room into a distinct emotional world. The result is a show that feels expansive, surprising, and deeply personal from one space to the next.
Hospital of Emotions is presented through a collaboration between House of Art and Dreams, ROYVA Group, and St. Vincent Behavioral Health Campus. Together, the partners have reimagined a historic property in transition, using art to connect architecture, community, and emotional experience. That setting gives the exhibition an added layer of meaning: visitors are not just walking through an art show, but through a space that is actively being reshaped for a new future.
If you are planning a visit, it is worth exploring the surrounding neighborhood before or after the exhibition. The area offers excellent Filipino dining options, and for a classic Los Angeles stop, Original Tommy’s is nearby with its famous chili-topped burgers and fries. Together, the food, the neighborhood, and the exhibition make for a memorable day out centered on one of the city’s most inventive new pop-up art experiences.
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