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{{Culture of Singapore sidebar}}{{History of art sidebar}}The '''visual art of Singapore''', or '''Singaporean art''', refers to all forms of [[Visual arts|visual art]] in or associated with [[Singapore]] throughout its history and towards the present-day. The history of Singaporean art includes the indigenous artistic traditions of the [[Malay Archipelago]] and the diverse visual practices of itinerant artists and migrants from [[China]], the [[Indian subcontinent]], and [[Europe]].<ref name=":62">{{Cite book |last=Susanto |first=Melinda |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |year=2015 |isbn=978-981-14-0557-0 |location=Singapore |pages=30–41 |chapter=Tropical Tapestry}}</ref>
{{Culture of Singapore sidebar}}{{History of art sidebar}}The '''visual art of Singapore''', or '''Singaporean art''', refers to all forms of [[Visual arts|visual art]] in or associated with [[Singapore]] throughout its history and towards the present-day. The history of Singaporean art includes the indigenous artistic traditions of the [[Malay Archipelago]] and the diverse visual practices of itinerant artists and migrants from [[China]], the [[Indian subcontinent]], and [[Europe]].<ref name=":62">{{Cite book |last=Susanto |first=Melinda |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |year=2015 |isbn=978-981-14-0557-0 |location=Singapore |pages=30–41 |chapter=Tropical Tapestry}}</ref>


Singaporean art includes the sculptural, [[Textile arts|textile]], and [[Decorative arts|decorative art]] traditions of the [[Malay world]]; [[portrait]]ure, [[Landscape painting|landscapes]], [[sculpture]], [[printmaking]], and [[natural history]] drawings from the country's British colonial period; along with Chinese-influenced [[Nanyang Style|Nanyang style]] paintings, [[Social realism|social realist art]], [[abstract art]], and [[photography]] practices emerging in the post-war period.<ref name=":62"/> Today, it includes the [[contemporary art]] practices of post-independence Singapore, such as [[performance art]], [[conceptual art]], [[installation art]], [[video art]], [[sound art]], and [[new media art]].<ref name=":452">{{Cite book |last=Toh |first=Charmaine |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |date=2015 |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |isbn=978-981-09-7384-1 |editor-last=Low |editor-first=Sze Wee |page=92 |chapter=Shifting Grounds}}</ref> The emergence of [[Modern art|modern]] Singaporean art, or more specifically, "the emergence of self-aware artistic expression"<ref name=":62"/> is often tied to the rise of art associations, art schools, and exhibitions in the 20th century, though this has since been expanded to include earlier forms of visual representation, such as from Singapore's historical periods.<ref name=":42">{{Cite book |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore since the 19th Century |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |year=2015 |isbn=978-981-09-7352-0 |editor-last=Low |editor-first=Sze Wee |location=Singapore |pages=8–29 |chapter=Some Introductory Remarks}}</ref><ref name=":022">{{Cite web |date=12 October 2016 |title=T.K. Sabapathy |url=https://www.esplanade.com/offstage/arts/t-k-sabapathy |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210227025531/https://www.esplanade.com/offstage/arts/t-k-sabapathy |archive-date=27 February 2021 |access-date=27 February 2021 |website=Esplanade Offstage}}</ref>
Singaporean art includes the sculptural, [[Textile arts|textile]], and [[Decorative arts|decorative art]] traditions of the [[Malay world]]; [[portrait]]ure, [[Landscape painting|landscapes]], [[sculpture]], [[printmaking]], and [[natural history]] drawings from the country's British colonial period; along with Chinese-influenced [[Nanyang Style|Nanyang style]] paintings, [[Social realism|social realist art]], [[abstract art]], and [[photography]] practices emerging in the post-war period.<ref name=":62"/> Today, it includes the [[contemporary art]] practices of post-independence Singapore, such as [[performance art]], [[conceptual art]], [[installation art]], [[video art]], [[sound art]], and [[new media art]].<ref name=":452">{{Cite book |last=Toh |first=Charmaine |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |date=2015 |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |isbn=978-981-09-7384-1 |editor-last=Low |editor-first=Sze Wee |page=92 |chapter=Shifting Grounds}}</ref> The emergence of [[Modern art|modern]] Singaporean art, or more specifically, "the emergence of self-aware artistic expression"<ref name=":62"/> is often tied to the rise of art associations, art schools, and exhibitions in the 20th century, though this has since been expanded to include earlier forms of visual representation, such as from Singapore's pre-colonial periods.<ref name=":42">{{Cite book |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore since the 19th Century |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |year=2015 |isbn=978-981-09-7352-0 |editor-last=Low |editor-first=Sze Wee |location=Singapore |pages=8–29 |chapter=Some Introductory Remarks}}</ref><ref name=":022">{{Cite web |date=12 October 2016 |title=T.K. Sabapathy |url=https://www.esplanade.com/offstage/arts/t-k-sabapathy |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210227025531/https://www.esplanade.com/offstage/arts/t-k-sabapathy |archive-date=27 February 2021 |access-date=27 February 2021 |website=Esplanade Offstage}}</ref>


Presently, the [[contemporary art]] of Singapore also circulates internationally through art [[biennale]]s and other major international exhibitions. Contemporary art in Singapore tends to examine themes of "hyper-modernity and the built environment; alienation and changing social mores; [[Postcolonialism|post-colonial]] identities and [[multiculturalism]]."<ref name=":12">{{Cite journal |last=Teh |first=David |date=2017 |title=Insular Visions: notes on video art in Singapore |url=https://www.academia.edu/29987712 |journal=The Japan Foundation Asia Center Art Studies |volume=3 |via=Academia.org |access-date=2021-05-17 |archive-date=2023-01-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230108202307/https://www.academia.edu/29987712 |url-status=live }}</ref> Across these tendencies, "the exploration of [[Performance art|performance]] and the performative body" is a common running thread.<ref name=":12" /> Singapore carries a notable history of [[performance art]], with the government historically having enacted a no-funding rule for that specific art form from 1994 to 2003, following a controversial performance artwork at the [[5th Passage]] art space.<ref name=":23">{{Cite book |last=Lee |first=Weng Choy |url=https://www.academia.edu/1330638 |title=Looking at Culture |date=1996 |publisher=Artres Design & Communications |isbn=981-00-6714-3 |editor-last=Krishnan |editor-first=S.K. Sanjay |location=Singapore |chapter=Chronology of a Controversy |editor-last2=Lee |editor-first2=Weng Choy |editor-last3=Perera |editor-first3=Leon |editor-last4=Yap |editor-first4=Jimmy |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608200204/https://www.academia.edu/1330638/Chronology_of_a_Controversy |archive-date=8 June 2020}}</ref><ref name=":52">{{Cite journal |last=Lingham |first=Susie |date=November 2011 |title=Art and Censorship in Singapore: Catch 22? |url=http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/76/ArtAndCensorshipInSingaporeCatch22 |journal=ArtAsiaPacific |issue=76 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140915073253/http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/76/ArtAndCensorshipInSingaporeCatch22 |archive-date=15 September 2014 |access-date=8 June 2020}}</ref>
Presently, the [[contemporary art]] of Singapore also circulates internationally through art [[biennale]]s and other major international exhibitions. Contemporary art in Singapore tends to examine themes of "hyper-modernity and the built environment; alienation and changing social mores; [[Postcolonialism|post-colonial]] identities and [[multiculturalism]]."<ref name=":12">{{Cite journal |last=Teh |first=David |date=2017 |title=Insular Visions: notes on video art in Singapore |url=https://www.academia.edu/29987712 |journal=The Japan Foundation Asia Center Art Studies |volume=3 |via=Academia.org |access-date=2021-05-17 |archive-date=2023-01-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230108202307/https://www.academia.edu/29987712 |url-status=live }}</ref> Across these tendencies, "the exploration of [[Performance art|performance]] and the performative body" is a common running thread.<ref name=":12" /> Singapore carries a notable history of [[performance art]], with the government historically having enacted a no-funding rule for that specific art form from 1994 to 2003, following a controversial performance artwork at the [[5th Passage]] art space.<ref name=":23">{{Cite book |last=Lee |first=Weng Choy |url=https://www.academia.edu/1330638 |title=Looking at Culture |date=1996 |publisher=Artres Design & Communications |isbn=981-00-6714-3 |editor-last=Krishnan |editor-first=S.K. Sanjay |location=Singapore |chapter=Chronology of a Controversy |editor-last2=Lee |editor-first2=Weng Choy |editor-last3=Perera |editor-first3=Leon |editor-last4=Yap |editor-first4=Jimmy |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608200204/https://www.academia.edu/1330638/Chronology_of_a_Controversy |archive-date=8 June 2020}}</ref><ref name=":52">{{Cite journal |last=Lingham |first=Susie |date=November 2011 |title=Art and Censorship in Singapore: Catch 22? |url=http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/76/ArtAndCensorshipInSingaporeCatch22 |journal=ArtAsiaPacific |issue=76 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140915073253/http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/76/ArtAndCensorshipInSingaporeCatch22 |archive-date=15 September 2014 |access-date=8 June 2020}}</ref>
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=== Early cartographic references ===
=== Early cartographic references ===
[[File:Ptolemy_Asia_detail.jpg|right|thumb|Ptolemy, ''Geographia'', VIII. 11th Map of Asia. Sabana given at the tip of the Malay Peninsula which was named as the [[Golden Chersonese|Golden Khersonese]].|204x204px]]The earliest depictions of ancient Singapore existed predominantly in textual and cartographical forms, with the first possible mention being a 2nd-century [[Common era|CE]] cartographic reference in Greco-Roman astronomer [[Ptolemy]]'s ''[[Geography (Ptolemy)|Geographia]]''. A place called ''Sabana'' or ''Sabara'' was marked on the 11th Map of Asia at the southern tip of the [[Golden Khersonese]] (meaning the [[Malay Peninsula]]) where Singapore may lie.<ref name="golden">{{cite book|author=Paul Wheatley|title=The Golden Khersonese: Studies in the Historical Geography of the Malay Peninsula before A.D. 1500|publisher=[[w:University of Malaya|University of Malaya Press]]|year=1961|location=Kuala Lumpur|pages=151–152|oclc=504030596|author-link=w:Paul Wheatley (geographer)}}</ref>
[[File:Ptolemy_Asia_detail.jpg|thumb|Ptolemy, ''Geographia'', VIII. 11th Map of Asia. Sabana given at the tip of the Malay Peninsula which was named as the [[Golden Chersonese|Golden Khersonese]].|153x153px]]The earliest depictions of ancient Singapore existed predominantly in textual and cartographical forms, with the first possible mention being a 2nd-century [[Common era|CE]] cartographic reference in Greco-Roman astronomer [[Ptolemy]]'s ''[[Geography (Ptolemy)|Geographia]]''. A place called ''Sabana'' or ''Sabara'' was marked on the 11th Map of Asia at the southern tip of the [[Golden Khersonese]] (meaning the [[Malay Peninsula]]) where Singapore may lie.<ref name="golden">{{cite book|author=Paul Wheatley|title=The Golden Khersonese: Studies in the Historical Geography of the Malay Peninsula before A.D. 1500|publisher=[[w:University of Malaya|University of Malaya Press]]|year=1961|location=Kuala Lumpur|pages=151–152|oclc=504030596|author-link=w:Paul Wheatley (geographer)}}</ref>
[[File:Mao_Kun_map_-_Singapore.png|thumb|The [[Mao Kun map]] from [[Wubei Zhi]] which is based on the early 15th century maps of [[Zheng He]] showing Temasek (あわすず) at the top left, and Long Ya Men (りゅうきばもん) on the right panel.|250x250px]]
[[File:Mao_Kun_map_-_Singapore.png|thumb|The [[Mao Kun map]] from [[Wubei Zhi]] which is based on the early 15th century maps of [[Zheng He]] showing Temasek (あわすず) at the top left, and Long Ya Men (りゅうきばもん) on the right panel.|220x220px]]
Early Singapore came to be known as "Temasek", a name possibly deriving from "''tasik''" (Malay for lake or sea) and taken to mean Sea-town in Malay.<ref name="toponym">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DTOJAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA381|title=Singapore Street Names: A Study of Toponymics|date=15 June 2013|publisher=Marshall Cavendish|isbn=978-981-4484-74-9|page=381|author=Victor R Savage |author2=Brenda Yeoh |access-date=18 May 2021|archive-date=12 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230412012131/https://books.google.com/books?id=DTOJAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA381|url-status=live}}</ref> The landscape of Temasek (あわすず) is visually depicted in the [[Mao Kun map]], a set of navigation charts published in the Ming dynasty military treatise ''[[Wubei Zhi]]''.<ref name="church">{{cite book|author=Sally Church|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kt9DIY1g9HYC&pg=PA2354|title=Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures|publisher=Springer|year=2008|isbn=978-1-4020-4559-2|editor=by Helaine Selin|edition=2nd|pages=2354–2355}}</ref> ''[[Long Ya Men]]'' (りゅうきばもん, ''Dragon's Teeth Gate'') is also depicted within the map, believed to be the entrance to [[Keppel Harbour]].<ref name=":3">{{cite web|title=しまえびすりゃく|url=https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E5%B3%B6%E5%A4%B7%E8%AA%8C%E7%95%A5|access-date=2021-05-18|archive-date=2020-12-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201201083551/https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E5%B3%B6%E5%A4%B7%E8%AA%8C%E7%95%A5|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="wheatley">{{cite book|author=Paul Wheatley|title=The Golden Khersonese: Studies in the Historical Geography of the Malay Peninsula before A.D. 1500|publisher=[[w:University of Malaya|University of Malaya Press]]|year=1961|location=Kuala Lumpur|pages=82–83|oclc=504030596|author-link=w:Paul Wheatley (geographer)}}</ref> In his work ''[[Daoyi Zhilüe]]'', [[Wang Dayuan]] described ''Long Ya Men'' as the two hills of Temasek that looked like "Dragon's teeth" between which a strait runs; ''Longyamen'' was written about here as one of two settlements in Temasek, the second being ''[[Banzu]]''.<ref name=":3" /><ref name="wheatley" /> The map is often regarded as a surviving document from the [[Treasure voyages|expeditions]] of [[Zheng He]], in addition to accounts written by Zheng's officers.
Early Singapore came to be known as "Temasek", a name possibly deriving from "''tasik''" (Malay for lake or sea) and taken to mean Sea-town in Malay.<ref name="toponym">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DTOJAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA381|title=Singapore Street Names: A Study of Toponymics|date=15 June 2013|publisher=Marshall Cavendish|isbn=978-981-4484-74-9|page=381|author=Victor R Savage |author2=Brenda Yeoh |access-date=18 May 2021|archive-date=12 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230412012131/https://books.google.com/books?id=DTOJAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA381|url-status=live}}</ref> The landscape of Temasek (あわすず) is visually depicted in the [[Mao Kun map]], a set of navigation charts published in the Ming dynasty military treatise ''[[Wubei Zhi]]''.<ref name="church">{{cite book|author=Sally Church|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kt9DIY1g9HYC&pg=PA2354|title=Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures|publisher=Springer|year=2008|isbn=978-1-4020-4559-2|editor=by Helaine Selin|edition=2nd|pages=2354–2355}}</ref> ''[[Long Ya Men]]'' (りゅうきばもん, ''Dragon's Teeth Gate'') is also depicted within the map, believed to be the entrance to [[Keppel Harbour]].<ref name=":3">{{cite web|title=しまえびすりゃく|url=https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E5%B3%B6%E5%A4%B7%E8%AA%8C%E7%95%A5|access-date=2021-05-18|archive-date=2020-12-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201201083551/https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E5%B3%B6%E5%A4%B7%E8%AA%8C%E7%95%A5|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="wheatley">{{cite book|author=Paul Wheatley|title=The Golden Khersonese: Studies in the Historical Geography of the Malay Peninsula before A.D. 1500|publisher=[[w:University of Malaya|University of Malaya Press]]|year=1961|location=Kuala Lumpur|pages=82–83|oclc=504030596|author-link=w:Paul Wheatley (geographer)}}</ref> In his work ''[[Daoyi Zhilüe]]'', [[Wang Dayuan]] described ''Long Ya Men'' as the two hills of Temasek that looked like "Dragon's teeth" between which a strait runs; ''Longyamen'' was written about here as one of two settlements in Temasek, the second being ''[[Banzu]]''.<ref name=":3" /><ref name="wheatley" /> The map is often regarded as a surviving document from the [[Treasure voyages|expeditions]] of [[Zheng He]], in addition to accounts written by Zheng's officers.


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== Colonial Singapore (1819–1942) ==
== Colonial Singapore (1819–1942) ==
From the 16th to 19th centuries, starting with the arrival of the [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]] at [[Malacca]] in 1509, the [[Malay Archipelago]] was gradually taken over by European colonial powers. During the 17th century, the early dominance of the Portuguese was challenged by the [[Dutch colonial empire|Dutch]], who came to control most of the ports in the region, while colonial powers such as the British had a relatively minor presence. Sir [[Stamford Raffles]], appointed as the Lieutenant Governor of the British colony at [[British Bencoolen|Bencoolen]] in 1818, arrived in Singapore on 28 January 1819 and soon recognised the island as a choice for a new port. Raffles sought to challenge the Dutch by establishing a new port along the [[Straits of Malacca]], which served as the main ship passageway for India-China trade. A formal treaty was signed on 6 February 1819, ushering in Singapore's colonial period.<ref>{{cite web|author=Jenny Ng|date=7 February 1997|title=1819 – The February Documents|url=http://www.mindef.gov.sg/imindef/about_us/history/overview/the_early_years/v01n02b_history.html|access-date=18 July 2006|publisher=[[Ministry of Defence (Singapore)]]|archive-date=17 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170717065310/https://www.mindef.gov.sg/imindef/about_us/history/overview/the_early_years/v01n02b_history.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Milestones in Singapore's Legal History|url=http://app.supremecourt.gov.sg/default.aspx?pgID=39l|access-date=18 July 2006|publisher=[[Supreme Court, Singapore]]}}{{dead link|date=May 2020|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> The British concentrated on building infrastructure such as housing, roads, and hospitals in order to maintain the economy, and did not set up an art academy.<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal |last=Yeo |first=Alicia |date=April 2006 |title=Singapore Art, Nanyang Style |url=http://www.microsite.nl.sg/PDFs/BiblioAsia/BIBA_0201Apr06.pdf |url-status=dead |journal=BiblioAsia |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=4–11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831064116/https://web.archive.org/web/20120227060158/http://www.microsite.nl.sg/PDFs/BiblioAsia/BIBA_0201Apr06.pdf |archive-date=31 August 2021 |via=National Library Board, Singapore}}</ref> While Raffles did intend for the teaching of art, the first British art teacher, Richard Walker, would only arrive almost a hundred years after Raffles' death in 1923.<ref name=":4" />
[[File:Heinrich_Leutemann,_Unterbrochene_Straßenmessung_auf_Singapore_(Interrupted_Road_Surveying_in_Singapore),_c._1865,_Wood_engraving_on_paper,_Collection_of_the_National_Museum_of_Singapore.jpg|thumb|249x249px|[[Heinrich Leutemann]], ''Unterbrochene Straßenmessung auf Singapore'' (Interrupted Road Surveying in Singapore), c. 1865, Wood engraving on paper, [[National Museum of Singapore]]]]
From the 16th to 19th centuries, starting with the arrival of the [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]] at [[Malacca]] in 1509, the [[Malay Archipelago]] was gradually taken over by European colonial powers. During the 17th century, the early dominance of the Portuguese was challenged by the [[Dutch colonial empire|Dutch]], who came to control most of the ports in the region, while colonial powers such as the British had a relatively minor presence. Sir [[Stamford Raffles]], appointed as the Lieutenant Governor of the British colony at [[British Bencoolen|Bencoolen]] in 1818, arrived in Singapore on 28 January 1819 and soon recognised the island as a choice for a new port. Raffles sought to challenge the Dutch by establishing a new port along the [[Straits of Malacca]], which served as the main ship passageway for India-China trade. A formal treaty was signed on 6 February 1819, ushering in Singapore's colonial period.<ref>{{cite web|author=Jenny Ng|date=7 February 1997|title=1819 – The February Documents|url=http://www.mindef.gov.sg/imindef/about_us/history/overview/the_early_years/v01n02b_history.html|access-date=18 July 2006|publisher=[[Ministry of Defence (Singapore)]]|archive-date=17 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170717065310/https://www.mindef.gov.sg/imindef/about_us/history/overview/the_early_years/v01n02b_history.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Milestones in Singapore's Legal History|url=http://app.supremecourt.gov.sg/default.aspx?pgID=39l|access-date=18 July 2006|publisher=[[Supreme Court, Singapore]]}}{{dead link|date=May 2020|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref>


During this period, the art of Singapore was diverse, influenced by travellers, itinerant artists, and migrants from [[China]], the [[Indian subcontinent]], as well as the West, all bringing different pictorial traditions.<ref name=":62" /> From the 19th century, European perecptions of Singapore are seen through art that depicted "[[Tropics|tropical]]" motifs like palm trees, [[Kampung (village)|''kampungs'']], and studies of locals.<ref name=":62" /> These motifs appear in the works of Singapore artists from the 1930s onwards.<ref name=":62" />
The visual art of this period includes examples such as Jules Itier's 1844 daguerreotype of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill, Heinrich Leutemann's lithograph ''Unterbrochene Strassenmessung auf Singapore'' (Road Surveying Interrupted in Singapore) (c. 1865–1885), as well as portraits of colonial figures.

=== Early visual records as a British settlement (19th century) ===
[[File:Singapore_from_the_Sea_June_1823_-_Lt._Phillip_Jackson.jpg|thumb|[[Philip Jackson (surveyor)|Philip Jackson]], ''A View of Singapore from the Sea'', June 1823, Pencil sketch]]
[[File:John_Michael_Houghton,_Drawing_from_the_Houghton_Album_titled_'Singapore_from_the_Rocky_Point,_1819',_13_x_18_cm,_Collection_of_National_Museum_of_Singapore.jpg|left|thumb|John Michael Houghton, ''Singapore from the Rocky Point, 1819'', 1819, 13 x 18 cm, [[National Museum of Singapore]]]]The earliest visual records of Singapore as a British settlement are 19th century images produced for marine coastal surveying.<ref name=":62" /> One of the earliest is ''Singapore from the Rocky Point, 1819'', a wash drawing by John Michael Houghton, a midshipman on board the [[HMS Discovery (1789)|HMS Discovery]], part of the naval escort accompanying Raffles on his journey to Singapore in 1819.<ref name=":92">{{Cite news |last=Shetty |first=Deepika |date=14 September 2015 |title=Highlights from the National Museum of Singapore's new permanent galleries |work=[[The Straits Times]] |url=https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/highlights-from-the-national-museum-of-singapores-new-permanent-galleries |access-date=19 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160803103329/https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/highlights-from-the-national-museum-of-singapores-new-permanent-galleries |archive-date=3 August 2016}}</ref> Created when Raffles first set foot on Singapore, it is one of 41 drawings from the Houghton Album, a compilation of views drawn by Houghton.<ref name=":92" /> Other early hydrographic sketches include [[Philip Jackson (surveyor)|Philip Jackson]]'s ''A View of Singapore from the Sea,'' dated 1823, and others by an unknown draughtsman on a marine ship accompanying Raffles during his survey of Karimun Islands, ''Sketch of the Land round Singapore Harbour'', dated February 1819, and ''Sketch of the Settlement of Singapore at anchor in 4 fathoms'', dated April 1819.<ref name=":62" />
[[File:Robert_Wilson_Wiber,_Panoramic_View_of_Singapore_from_the_Harbour,_1849,_Watercolour_and_gouache_on_paper,_32_x_67.5_cm.jpg|thumb|220x220px|Robert Wilson Wiber, ''Panoramic View of Singapore from the Harbour'', 1849, Watercolour and gouache on paper, 32 x 67.5 cm]]
These sketches were used for navigational purposes, though they visually resemble later landscape works created mainly for artistic expression.<ref name=":62" /> For example, Robert Wilson Wiber's [[Watercolor painting|watercolour painting]], ''Panoramic View of Singapore from the Harbour'' (1849) depicts the island from the perspective of the sea.<ref name=":62" /> Singapore was largely known as a British port in the 19th century, with popular representations of Singapore including harbour and port scenes.<ref name=":62" /> Some of the early artists painting Singapore include [[John Turnbull Thomson]] and [[Charles Andrew Dyce]], British officers in colonial Singapore who also worked in fields like surveying, architecture, and engineering.<ref name=":62" />
[[File:Heinrich_Leutemann,_Unterbrochene_Straßenmessung_auf_Singapore_(Interrupted_Road_Surveying_in_Singapore),_c._1865,_Wood_engraving_on_paper,_Collection_of_the_National_Museum_of_Singapore.jpg|thumb|220x220px|[[Heinrich Leutemann]], ''Unterbrochene Straßenmessung auf Singapore'' (Interrupted Road Surveying in Singapore), c. 1865, Wood engraving on paper, [[National Museum of Singapore]]]]
In 1865, the German popular spreadsheet ''[[Die Gartenlaube]]'' published the article "Die Tigernoth in Singapore," which begins with an account of an escaped jaguar from a local zoo. It continues with [[George Drumgoole Coleman]]'s encounter with a tiger during a surveying trip near a jungle in Singapore in 1835.<ref name=":62" /> A lithographic print by [[Heinrich Leutemann]] accompanies the article. Titled ''Unterbrochene Straßenmessung auf Singapore'' (Road Surveying Interrupted in Singapore) (c. 1865–1885), it depicts the dramatic scene of the tiger leaping out from the jungle, knocking over Coleman's [[theodolite]].<ref name=":62" /> The work has been of significant interest to recent scholarship, which focuses on the historical and metaphorical significance of the tiger.<ref name=":62" /> It has been suggested that the incident was exaggerated or did not truly occur, emphasising the imaginary surrounding the supposed dangers of the [[Southeast Asia|Southeast Asian]] [[jungle]].<ref name=":62" /><gallery perrow="4" widths="100" heights="100">
File:Charles Dyce, The Town and the Roadstead from Government Hill, 1842-47, Watercolour & ink on paper, 353 x 514 mm.png|[[Charles Andrew Dyce]], ''The Town and the Roadstead from Government Hill'', 1842-47, Watercolour & ink on paper, 353 x 514 mm, [[NUS Museum]]
File:Charles Andrew Dyce, Cairnhill, Singapore, 1842, Watercolour & ink on paper, 263 x 363 mm.png|[[Charles Andrew Dyce]], ''Cairnhill, Singapore'', 1842, Watercolour & ink on paper, 263 x 363 mm, [[NUS Museum]]
File:Charles Dyce, Government Hill from the New Harbour Road, Singapore, 1846, Watercolour & Ink on paper, 27.2 x 44.8 cm.png|[[Charles Andrew Dyce]], ''Government Hill from the New Harbour Road, Singapore'', 1846, Watercolour & Ink on paper, 27.2 x 44.8 cm, [[NUS Museum]]
</gallery>


=== Natural history drawings ===
=== Natural history drawings ===
{{Main|William Farquhar Collection of Natural History Drawings}}[[William Farquhar]] commissioned [[natural history]] drawings during his time as Resident of Malacca from 1803 to 1818. These were some of the earliest visual practices of the region.<ref name=":62" /><gallery perrow="4" widths="150" heights="150">
{{Main|William Farquhar Collection of Natural History Drawings}}[[William Farquhar]] commissioned [[natural history]] drawings during his time as Resident of Malacca from 1803 to 1818. These were some of the earliest visual practices of the region.<ref name=":62" /><gallery perrow="4" widths="100" heights="100">
File:Garcinia_Mangostana;_Booah_Mangies;_Boorong_Merbo_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Garcinia Mangostana; Booah Mangies; Boorong Merbo (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Garcinia Mangostana; Booah Mangies; Boorong Merbo (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Garcinia Mangostana; Booah Mangies; Boorong Merbo (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Jasminum;_Akar_Benang;_Pokok_Akar_Banang_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Jasminum; Akar Benang; Pokok Akar Banang (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Jasminum; Akar Benang; Pokok Akar Banang (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Jasminum; Akar Benang; Pokok Akar Banang (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Onka'_Pootie_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Onka' Pootie (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Onka' Pootie (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Onka' Pootie (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Boorong_Antoo;_Owl_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Boorong Antoo; Owl (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Boorong Antoo; Owl (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Boorong Antoo; Owl (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Bentoorong_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Bentoorong (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Bentoorong (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Bentoorong (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Lava_Etam_(Malay);_Black_Pepper;_Piper_Nigrum_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Lava Etam (Malay); Black Pepper; Piper Nigrum (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Lava Etam (Malay); Black Pepper; Piper Nigrum (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Lava Etam (Malay); Black Pepper; Piper Nigrum (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Doorean;_Durio_stercorae;_D._zibethina_Linn_(William_Farquhar_Collection,_1819–1823).jpg|Doorean; Durio stercorae; D. zibethina Linn (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
File:Doorean; Durio stercorae; D. zibethina Linn (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823).jpg|Doorean; Durio stercorae; D. zibethina Linn (William Farquhar Collection, 1819–1823)
</gallery>
</gallery>


=== Early photography ===
=== Early photography ===
[[File:Jules_Itier’s_1844_daguerreotype_of_Boat_Quay_and_Singapore_River_from_Government_Hill,_1844,_12.6_x_15_x_0.3_cm,_National_Museum_of_Singapore.png|thumb|[[Jules Itier|Jules Itier's]] 1844 daguerreotype of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill, 1844, 12.6 x 15 x 0.3 cm, [[National Museum of Singapore]]]]
[[File:Jules_Itier’s_1844_daguerreotype_of_Boat_Quay_and_Singapore_River_from_Government_Hill,_1844,_12.6_x_15_x_0.3_cm,_National_Museum_of_Singapore.png|thumb|[[Jules Itier|Jules Itier's]] 1844 daguerreotype of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill, 1844, 12.6 x 15 x 0.3 cm, [[National Museum of Singapore]]]]
The earliest surviving photographic views of Singapore as a British settlement are [[Jules Itier]]'s 1844 [[daguerreotype]] of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill.<ref name=":7">{{Cite book |last=Liu |first=Gretchen |title=Singapore: A Pictorial History, 1819–2000 |publisher=Archipelago Press in association with the National Heritage Board |year=1999 |isbn=981-3018-81-X |location=Singapore |pages=18–89}}</ref><gallery perrow="4" widths="150" heights="150">
The earliest surviving photographic views of Singapore as a British settlement are [[Jules Itier]]'s 1844 [[daguerreotype]] of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill.<ref name=":7">{{Cite book |last=Liu |first=Gretchen |title=Singapore: A Pictorial History, 1819–2000 |publisher=Archipelago Press in association with the National Heritage Board |year=1999 |isbn=981-3018-81-X |location=Singapore |pages=18–89}}</ref><gallery perrow="4" widths="100" heights="100">
File:August Sachtler, Untitled photograph (portrait of woman) from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits, c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2 cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore.png|August Sachtler, ''Untitled photograph (portrait of woman) from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits'', c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2&nbsp;cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore
File:August Sachtler, Untitled photograph (portrait of woman) from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits, c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2 cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore.png|August Sachtler, ''Untitled photograph (portrait of woman) from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits'', c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2 cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore
File:August Sachtler, Untitled photograph from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits, c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2 cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore.png|August Sachtler, ''Untitled photograph from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits'', c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2&nbsp;cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore
File:August Sachtler, Untitled photograph from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits, c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2 cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore.png|August Sachtler, ''Untitled photograph from group of 20 cartes-de-visite portraits'', c. 1860s, 10.2 x 6.2 cm, Collection of National Museum of Singapore
File:August Sachtler, A Calladium - Tanglin, Singapore, c. 1860s, Black-and-white photograph, 10.4 x 6.1 cm, National Museum of Singapore.png|August Sachtler, ''A Calladium - Tanglin, Singapore'', c. 1860s, Black-and-white photograph, 10.4 x 6.1&nbsp;cm, National Museum of Singapore
File:August Sachtler, A Calladium - Tanglin, Singapore, c. 1860s, Black-and-white photograph, 10.4 x 6.1 cm, National Museum of Singapore.png|August Sachtler, ''A Calladium - Tanglin, Singapore'', c. 1860s, Black-and-white photograph, 10.4 x 6.1 cm, National Museum of Singapore
</gallery>
</gallery>


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[[File:Annaratnam Gunaratnam, Mavis, 1953, Bronze sculpture, 49.0 x 37.0 x 22.0 cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore.jpeg|thumb|225x225px|Annaratnam Gunaratnam, ''Mavis'', 1953, Bronze sculpture, 49.0 x 37.0 x 22.0 cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore]]
[[File:Annaratnam Gunaratnam, Mavis, 1953, Bronze sculpture, 49.0 x 37.0 x 22.0 cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore.jpeg|thumb|225x225px|Annaratnam Gunaratnam, ''Mavis'', 1953, Bronze sculpture, 49.0 x 37.0 x 22.0 cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore]]
Annaratnam Gunnaratnam was a sculptor who was also the head of the art department of [[Raffles Girls' School (Secondary)|Raffles Girls' Secondary School]] in Singapore from 1948 to 1968.<ref name=":15">{{Cite web |title=Mavis |url=https://www.roots.gov.sg/Collection-Landing/listing/1388600 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220313114355/https://www.roots.gov.sg/Collection-Landing/listing/1388600 |archive-date=13 March 2022 |access-date=20 April 2023 |website=Roots.sg}}</ref> She specialised in portrait sculptures, being commissioned to create sculptures of [[Mahatma Gandhi]] and [[Swami Vivekananda]] for the Ramakrishna Mission Bartley Road, Singapore.<ref name=":15" /> Her sculpture, ''Mavis'', demonstrates Gunnaratnam's technical ability in casting and depicting [[Realism (arts)|realist]] female sculptural forms with dignity, capturing details like the subject's facial expression and folds in her clothes.<ref name=":15" />
Annaratnam Gunnaratnam was a sculptor who was also the head of the art department of [[Raffles Girls' School (Secondary)|Raffles Girls' Secondary School]] in Singapore from 1948 to 1968.<ref name=":15">{{Cite web |title=Mavis |url=https://www.roots.gov.sg/Collection-Landing/listing/1388600 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220313114355/https://www.roots.gov.sg/Collection-Landing/listing/1388600 |archive-date=13 March 2022 |access-date=20 April 2023 |website=Roots.sg}}</ref> She specialised in portrait sculptures, being commissioned to create sculptures of [[Mahatma Gandhi]] and [[Swami Vivekananda]] for the Ramakrishna Mission Bartley Road, Singapore.<ref name=":15" /> Her sculpture, ''Mavis'', demonstrates Gunnaratnam's technical ability in casting and depicting [[Realism (arts)|realist]] female sculptural forms with dignity, capturing details like the subject's facial expression and folds in her clothes.<ref name=":15" />

=== Malay printed material ===
Singapore holds examples of the Malay Archipelago's tradition of [[Illuminated manuscript|illuminated manuscripts]] and early illustrated Malay newspapers, demonstrating the presence of visual modernity in the region during the 19th century.<ref name=":62" /><ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Abdullah |first=Sarena |date=21 December 2018 |title=Expanding the Historical Narrative of Early Visual Modernity in Malaya |url=https://ejournal.usm.my/wacanaseni/article/view/ws-vol17-2018-2 |journal=Wacana Seni Journal of Arts Discourse |volume=17 |pages=41–75}}</ref>
[[File:AbdullahbinAbdulKadir-HikayatAbdullah-1849.jpg|thumb|207x207px|A page of the ''[[Hikayat Abdullah]]'' (1849) by [[Abdullah Abdul Kadir|Munshi Abdullah]], written in [[Malay language|Malay]] in the [[Jawi script]], Collection of the [[National Library, Singapore|National Library of Singapore]]]]
Scribes created illustrated motifs and decorations within books, as seen in the decorated frontispiece for the lithographic edition of [[Hikayat Abdullah|''Hikayat Abdullah'']] (''The Tale of Abdullah'').<ref name=":62" /> This autobiography by [[Abdullah Abdul Kadir]], better known as Munshi Abdullah, was lithographed at the Mission Press in Singapore in 1849, one of the first [[Malay language]] books published in print and written by someone who identified as Malay.<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":0" /> The manuscript for ''Hikayat Abdullah'' has a frontispiece decorated with sketches of red and green floral motifs, including a simple frame.<ref name=":0" /> Here, the illustrator experiments with scripts darkened to suggest forms and shadows, providing the illusion of depth to the decorative patterns.<ref name=":0" />
[[File:Jawiperanakan1888.jpg|thumb|220x220px|Front page of ''Jawi Peranakan'' on 16 January 1888, featuring an illustrated logo at its masthead]]
An early example of a Malay newspaper was the ''Jawi Peranakan'', circulating from 1876 to 1895 for locals in Malaya.<ref name=":0" /> It was published in [[Jawi script]] and produced in Singapore as a main trading hub in the region.<ref name=":0" /> ''Jawi Peranakan'' had an illustrated logo depicting a ''pohon beringin'' ([[Banyan|banyan tree]]) frame, which contained elaborate mirrored Jawi typography, contained within a garland.<ref name=":0" />

Though Malay printing in the region was closely linked to the production of religious texts, publishing grew in its role in marketing, politics, and entertainment during the 20th century.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |url=https://www.malayheritage.gov.sg/en/~/media/mhc/documents/exhibitions/mhc_mereka%20utusan%20exhibition%20gallery%20guide_english.pdf |title=Mereka Utusan: Imprinting Malay Modernity, 1920s-1960s |publisher=Malay Heritage Centre |year=2016 |location=Singapore}}</ref> There was a push for Malay identity to be viewed from more local or ‘peninsular’ perspectives, with Malay identity no longer strictly Islamic.<ref name=":2" /> Beyond text, discourse about Malay identity took visual form in 1930s satirical editorial cartoons and illustrated advertisements.<ref name=":2" />


=== Art associations, schools, and exhibitions ===
=== Art associations, schools, and exhibitions ===
[[File:Low_Kway_Song,_Lynx,_1921,_Oil_on_canvas,_58.5_x_45_cm.png|thumb|228x228px|Low Kway Song, ''Lynx'', 1921, Oil on canvas, 58.5 x 45 cm|left]]
[[File:Low_Kway_Song,_Lynx,_1921,_Oil_on_canvas,_58.5_x_45_cm.png|thumb|195x195px|Low Kway Song, ''Lynx'', 1921, Oil on canvas, 58.5 x 45 cm|left]]
The emergence of [[Modern art|modern]] Singaporean art is often tied to the rise of art associations, art schools, and exhibitions in the 20th century.<ref name=":42"/> In 1909, the Amateur Drawing Association was founded. the Amateur Drawing Association, led by its first president Tan Kok Tiong, had a club house in [[Amoy Street, Singapore|Amoy Street]] and a membership of about 50 in its first year. The association's activities included "drawing, literary pursuits and physical culture," but as there were few "drawing members" in spite of an exhibition of members' drawings held in February 1913. The Amateur Drawing Association suggests a social network of art enthusiasts who were associated with the Straits Chinese and British elite.<ref name=":8">{{Cite book|last=Kwok|first=Kian Chow|title=Channels & Confluences: A History of Singapore Art|publisher=Singapore Art Museum|year=1996|isbn=978-981-00-7488-3|location=Singapore}}</ref>
The emergence of [[Modern art|modern]] Singaporean art is often tied to the rise of art associations, art schools, and exhibitions in the 20th century.<ref name=":42"/> In 1909, the Amateur Drawing Association was founded.<ref name=":8" /> Led by its first president Tan Kok Tiong, had a club house in [[Amoy Street, Singapore|Amoy Street]] and a membership of about 50 in its first year.<ref name=":8" /> The association's activities included "drawing, literary pursuits and physical culture," but as there were few "drawing members" in spite of an exhibition of members' drawings held in February 1913.<ref name=":8" /> The Amateur Drawing Association suggests a social network of art enthusiasts who were associated with the Straits Chinese and British elite.<ref name=":8">{{Cite book|last=Kwok|first=Kian Chow|title=Channels & Confluences: A History of Singapore Art|publisher=Singapore Art Museum|year=1996|isbn=978-981-00-7488-3|location=Singapore}}</ref>


Low Kway Song's ''Lynx'' (1921) and ''Thai Temple'' (1923) are art historically notable as some of the few oil paintings from Singapore that can be traced to this moment of artistic production in the early 20th century.<ref name=":8" />
Low Kway Song's ''Lynx'' (1921) and ''Thai Temple'' (1923) are art historically notable as some of the few oil paintings from Singapore that can be traced to this moment of artistic production in the early 20th century.<ref name=":8" />
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{{Main|Nanyang Style}}
{{Main|Nanyang Style}}
[[File:Georgette_Chen,_Sweet_Rambutans,_1965,_Painting_oil_on_canvas.jpg|right|thumb|210x210px|[[Georgette Chen]], ''Sweet Rambutans'', 1965, Oil on canvas]]
[[File:Georgette_Chen,_Sweet_Rambutans,_1965,_Painting_oil_on_canvas.jpg|right|thumb|210x210px|[[Georgette Chen]], ''Sweet Rambutans'', 1965, Oil on canvas]]
Artists such as [[Chen Wen Hsi]], [[Cheong Soo Pieng]], and Fan Chang Tien, affected by tumultuous sociopolitical changes in China, moved to Singapore from the 1930s onwards, creating conditions for a unique local art movement called the Nanyang style of painting.<ref name=":62" /> The name of the movement draws from "[[Nanyang (region)|Nanyang]]" ([[Chinese language|Chinese]]: 南洋なんよう; [[pinyin]]: ''nán yáng''; <small>[[Literal translation|lit.]]</small> 'Southern Ocean'), a [[Sinocentrism|sinocentric]] Chinese term that refers to [[Southeast Asia]] from the geographical perspective of [[China]].<ref name=":05">{{Cite web |last=Balagopal |first=Roberta |author2=Yeo, Alicia |date=31 August 2009 |title=The Nanyang Style |url=http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_1626_2009-12-31.html |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110310064215/http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_1626_2009-12-31.html |archivedate=10 March 2011 |accessdate=2010-08-06 |publisher=[[National Library Board]] |format=article}}</ref>
While the visual art of Singapore is influenced by a multitude of cultures from neighbouring regions, the most dominantly historicised aesthetics from the [[Modern art|modern]] period lies with the local and migrant Chinese artists whose art practices depicted local [[Southeast Asian]] subject matter while drawing upon Western [[Watercolor painting|watercolor]] and [[oil painting]], as well as [[Ink wash painting|Chinese ink]] traditions.<ref name=":022"/><ref>{{Cite book|last=Sabapathy|first=T.K.|title=Road to Nowhere: The Quick Rise and the Long Fall of Art History in Singapore|publisher=The Art Gallery, National Institute of Education|year=2010|isbn=978-981-08-5264-1|location=Singapore}}</ref> The most well-known are the migrant Chinese artists who painted in the [[Nanyang Style|Nanyang style]] in the 1950s, which includes figures such as [[Georgette Chen]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|last=Balagopal|first=Roberta|author2=Yeo, Alicia|date=31 August 2009|title=The Nanyang Style|url=http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_1626_2009-12-31.html|publisher=[[National Library Board]]|format=article|access-date=2010-08-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110310064215/http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_1626_2009-12-31.html|archive-date=10 March 2011}}</ref> The name of the movement draws from "[[Nanyang (region)|Nanyang]]" ({{zh|c=南洋なんよう|p=nán yáng|l=Southern Ocean}}), a [[Sinocentrism|sinocentric]] Chinese term used to refer to [[Southeast Asia]] from the geographical perspective of [[China]].<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite web|author=Ting Szu Kiong|year=2005|title=Nanyang Art|url=http://www.centralsingapore.org.sg/site/voices/voices8/page9.shtml|publisher=Central Singapore Community Development Council|format=article|access-date=2010-08-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091227173533/http://www.centralsingapore.org.sg/site/voices/voices8/page9.shtml|archive-date=2009-12-27}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Yeo|first=Alicia|date=April 2006|title=Singapore Art, ''Nanyang'' Style|pages=4–11|newspaper=biblioasia|publisher=[[National Library Board]]|location=Singapore|url=http://www.microsite.nl.sg/PDFs/BiblioAsia/BIBA_0201Apr06.pdf|access-date=2010-08-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120227060158/http://www.microsite.nl.sg/PDFs/BiblioAsia/BIBA_0201Apr06.pdf|archive-date=2012-02-27}}</ref>

Migrant Chinese artists painting in the [[Nanyang Style|Nanyang style]] from the late 1940s to 1960s are some of the most well-known visual practices in the history of Singapore art.<ref name=":05" /> As immigrant artists attracted to unfamiliar tropical landscapes, the Nanyang artists painted local [[Southeast Asia|Southeast Asian]] landscapes and subject matter such as tropical fruit, [[Kampung (village)|''kampung'']] scenes, and ''[[batik]]'' fabric while combining Western [[Watercolor painting|watercolor]], [[oil painting]], and [[Ink wash painting|Chinese ink]] traditions.<ref name=":115">{{Cite book |last=Ong |first=Zhen Min |title=Nanyang Reverie |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |year=2015 |isbn=9789811405570 |location=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |pages=42–53}}</ref> Some of the most well-known Nanyang artists are [[Georgette Chen]], [[Chen Chong Swee]], [[Chen Wen Hsi]], [[Cheong Soo Pieng]], and [[Liu Kang (artist)|Liu Kang]].<ref name=":17">{{Cite web |author=Ting Szu Kiong |year=2005 |title=Nanyang Art |url=http://www.centralsingapore.org.sg/site/voices/voices8/page9.shtml |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091227173533/http://www.centralsingapore.org.sg/site/voices/voices8/page9.shtml |archivedate=2009-12-27 |accessdate=2010-08-06 |publisher=Central Singapore Community Development Council |format=article}}</ref>
[[File:Liu_Kang,_Artist_and_Model,_1954,_84_x_124cm,_Oil_on_canvas,_Collection_of_National_Gallery_Singapore.jpg|thumb|220x220px|Liu Kang, ''Artist and Model'', 1954, Oil on canvas, 84 x 124cm, Collection of [[National Gallery Singapore]]]]
The Nanyang artists [[Liu Kang (artist)|Liu Kang]], [[Cheong Soo Pieng]], [[Chen Wen Hsi]], and [[Chen Chong Swee]] famously embarked on a 1952 painting trip to [[Bali]], creating paintings of Balinese landscapes and people.<ref name=":115" /> Based on a sketch from this trip, Liu Kang's ''Artist and Model'' (1954) is a painting of fellow artist Chen Wen Hsi while he sketches a Balinese woman.<ref name=":115" /> The white outlines used in the painting are said to be inspired by ''batik'' painting.<ref name=":115" />


=== Pictorialism and salon photography (1950s–60s) ===
=== Pictorialism and salon photography (1950s–60s) ===
Pictorialism by photographers in Singapore is defined as "an assertion of individual expression that manifested as a distinct pluralism of styles and subject matter", with an emphasis on "expression and beauty" in their photographs.<ref name=":18">{{Cite journal |last=Toh |first=Charmaine |date=October 2018 |title=Pictorialism and Modernity in Singapore, 1950–60 |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/707952/pdf |journal=Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=9–31 |doi=10.1353/sen.2018.0013 |s2cid=192678258 |via=Project MUSE |access-date=2021-05-23 |archive-date=2022-07-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220707023810/https://muse.jhu.edu/article/707952/pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> This is different from earlier pictorial photographers in [[Europe]] and [[North America]], who were working towards getting photography recognised as fine art.<ref name=":18" /> Singaporean photographers, who had art exhibitions featuring photographs with paintings from 1951, did not face the same tensions between photography and painting, and were thus more open to a variety of photographic styles.<ref name=":18" />
Pictorialism by photographers in Singapore is defined as "an assertion of individual expression that manifested as a distinct pluralism of styles and subject matter", with an emphasis on "expression and beauty" in their photographs.<ref name=":18">{{Cite journal |last=Toh |first=Charmaine |date=October 2018 |title=Pictorialism and Modernity in Singapore, 1950–60 |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/707952/pdf |journal=Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=9–31 |doi=10.1353/sen.2018.0013 |s2cid=192678258 |via=Project MUSE |access-date=2021-05-23 |archive-date=2022-07-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220707023810/https://muse.jhu.edu/article/707952/pdf |url-status=live |doi-access=free }}</ref> This is different from earlier pictorial photographers in [[Europe]] and [[North America]], who were working towards getting photography recognised as fine art.<ref name=":18" /> Singaporean photographers, who had art exhibitions featuring photographs with paintings from 1951, did not face the same tensions between photography and painting, and were thus more open to a variety of photographic styles.<ref name=":18" />


== Self-government (1955–1963) ==
== Self-government (1955–1963) ==
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On 16 September 1963, the merger between Malaya, Singapore, [[Crown Colony of North Borneo|North Borneo]] (renamed [[Sabah]]), and [[Crown Colony of Sarawak|Sarawak]] took place, marking the official formation of [[Malaysia]].<ref name="uslcRoadToIndependence">{{cite web |title=Singapore – Road to Independence |url=http://countrystudies.us/singapore/10.htm |access-date=27 June 2006 |publisher=U.S. Library of Congress |archive-date=4 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140704220519/http://countrystudies.us/singapore/10.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>
On 16 September 1963, the merger between Malaya, Singapore, [[Crown Colony of North Borneo|North Borneo]] (renamed [[Sabah]]), and [[Crown Colony of Sarawak|Sarawak]] took place, marking the official formation of [[Malaysia]].<ref name="uslcRoadToIndependence">{{cite web |title=Singapore – Road to Independence |url=http://countrystudies.us/singapore/10.htm |access-date=27 June 2006 |publisher=U.S. Library of Congress |archive-date=4 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140704220519/http://countrystudies.us/singapore/10.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>


=== The ''Modern Art'' exhibition (1963) and the Modern Art Society ===
=== Modern Art Society ===
The [[Modern Art Society]] (MAS) organised the ''Modern Art'' exhibition, held at the National Library from 12 October to 27 October 1963.<ref name=":25">{{Cite book |last=Seng |first=Yu Jin |title=Transcend: 50 Years of Singapore Modern Art |publisher=Iola Liu |year=2017 |isbn=978-981-11-3759-4 |editor-last=Seng |editor-first=Yu Jin |location=Singapore |pages=14–21 |chapter=Claiming the Modern: The Modern Art Society's Inaugural Exhibition in 1963 within a Timeline of Singapore Art |editor-last2=Tan |editor-first2=Ping Chiang}}</ref>
The [[Modern Art Society]] (MAS), launched with [[Ho Ho Ying]] as president in 1963, organised the exhibition titled ''Modern Art'' at the National Library from 12 October to 27 October 1963.<ref name=":25">{{Cite book |last=Seng |first=Yu Jin |url=https://issuu.com/asiaartcollective/docs/transcend_ |title=Transcend: 50 Years of Singapore Modern Art |publisher=Iola Liu |year=2017 |isbn=978-981-11-3759-4 |editor-last=Seng |editor-first=Yu Jin |location=Singapore |pages=14–21 |chapter=Claiming the Modern: The Modern Art Society's Inaugural Exhibition in 1963 within a Timeline of Singapore Art |access-date=19 January 2024 |editor-last2=Tan |editor-first2=Ping Chiang }}</ref> The aims of the MAS included "the promotion of modern art in Malaysia," with the use of "Malaysia" rather than 'Malaya' or 'Singapore' pointing to this specific period when Singapore was part of Malaysia.<ref name=":25" /> The MAS hoped for the ''Modern Art'' exhibition to travel through Malaysia, including to cities like Kuala Lumpur.<ref name=":25" />


The ''Modern Art'' exhibition was given prominent local media coverage, especially through Chinese newspapers and English-language ''The Straits Times''.<ref name=":25" /> A week into the ''Modern Art'' exhibition, a painting by Tay Chee Toh was reported in the newspapers to have been slashed by another artist whose practice the MAS had rejected as outmoded, demonstrating the tensions surrounding abstract painting and its role in society.<ref name=":25" /> The founding of the MAS thus positioned abstract painting as a modern visual language in 1960s Singapore, instead of social realist painting.<ref name=":25" />
== Republic of Singapore (1965–present) ==
[[Contemporary art]] in Singapore tends to examine themes of "hyper-modernity and the built environment; alienation and changing social mores; post-colonial identities and multiculturalism."<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Teh|first=David|date=2017|title=Insular Visions: notes on video art in Singapore|url=https://www.academia.edu/29987712|journal=The Japan Foundation Asia Center Art Studies|volume=3|via=Academia.org|access-date=2021-05-17|archive-date=2021-05-17|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210517073952/https://www.academia.edu/29987712/Insular_Visions_notes_on_video_art_in_Singapore|url-status=live}}</ref> Across these tendencies, "the exploration of performance and the performative body" is a common running thread.<ref name=":1" />


== Republic of Singapore (1965–present) ==
=== Contemporary art practices ===
[[File:Cheo Chai-Hiang, 5’ x 5’ (Singapore River), 1972, remade for display in Telah Terbit (Out Now) at the Singapore Art Museum in 2006, Mixed media, 150 x 150 cm.png|thumb|Cheo Chai-Hiang, ''5' x 5' (Singapore River)'', 1972, remade for display in 2006, Mixed media, 150 x 150 cm]]
[[File:Cheo Chai-Hiang, 5’ x 5’ (Singapore River), 1972, remade for display in Telah Terbit (Out Now) at the Singapore Art Museum in 2006, Mixed media, 150 x 150 cm.png|thumb|Cheo Chai-Hiang, ''5' x 5' (Singapore River)'', 1972, remade for display in 2006, Mixed media, 150 x 150 cm]]
The 1970s saw artists shift away from modern art practices like sculpture and painting, towards contemporary art practices like video, installation, and conceptual art.<ref name=":453" /> Often seen as an early example of conceptualism in Singapore is Cheo Chai-Hiang's ''5' x 5' (Singapore River)'', where Cheo mailed a set of instructions from London to the Modern Art Society in Singapore.''<ref name=":453" />'' Here, he asked the Society to construct a square measuring 5 feet by 5 feet in the gallery space for their annual exhibition, an artwork proposal they eventually chose not to exhibit.''<ref name=":453" />''
The 1970s saw artists shift away from modern art practices like sculpture and painting, towards contemporary art practices like video, installation, and conceptual art.<ref name=":453" /> [[Contemporary art]] in Singapore tends to examine themes of "hyper-modernity and the built environment; alienation and changing social mores; post-colonial identities and multiculturalism."<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Teh |first=David |date=2017 |title=Insular Visions: notes on video art in Singapore |url=https://www.academia.edu/29987712 |url-status=live |journal=The Japan Foundation Asia Center Art Studies |volume=3 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210517073952/https://www.academia.edu/29987712/Insular_Visions_notes_on_video_art_in_Singapore |archive-date=2021-05-17 |access-date=2021-05-17 |via=Academia.org}}</ref> Across these tendencies, "the exploration of performance and the performative body" is a common running thread.<ref name=":1" />

For example, often seen as an early example of conceptualism in Singapore is Cheo Chai-Hiang's ''5' x 5' (Singapore River)'', where Cheo mailed a set of instructions from London to the Modern Art Society in Singapore.''<ref name=":453" />'' Here, he asked the Society to construct a square measuring 5 feet by 5 feet in the gallery space for their annual exhibition, an artwork proposal they eventually chose not to exhibit.''<ref name=":453" />''


=== Trimurti ===
=== Trimurti ===
Line 127: Line 152:
It was significant that the exhibition had a Hindu name, with Indians being an ethnic minority in Chinese-dominated Singapore and NAFA's teachers regularly teaching art in the Chinese language.<ref name=":9" /> The exhibition thus called out cultural biases at NAFA and asserted that non-Chinese identities were equally and unquestionably Singaporean.<ref name=":9" />
It was significant that the exhibition had a Hindu name, with Indians being an ethnic minority in Chinese-dominated Singapore and NAFA's teachers regularly teaching art in the Chinese language.<ref name=":9" /> The exhibition thus called out cultural biases at NAFA and asserted that non-Chinese identities were equally and unquestionably Singaporean.<ref name=":9" />


The three artists sought to embrace differences as a collective, reflecting Singapore's multiculturalism through each of their racial and religious identities, as a Malay-Muslim for Salleh, Chinese-Buddhist for Goh, and Indian-Hindu for Chandrasekaran.<ref name=":9" /> For example, Chandrasekaran's work, Visvayoni, draws upon the term "yoni," the Sanskrit word for "womb," which is a symbol for the Mother Goddess [[Shakti]] from Hinduism.<ref name=":453" /> The performance Chandrasekaran did for the work thus symbolised processes of birth, creation, and change.<ref name=":453" />
The three artists sought to embrace differences as a collective, reflecting Singapore's multiculturalism through each of their racial and religious identities, as a Malay-Muslim for Salleh, Chinese-Buddhist for Goh, and Indian-Hindu for Chandrasekaran.<ref name=":9" /> For example, Chandrasekaran's work ''Visvayoni'' draws upon the term "yoni," the Sanskrit word for "womb," which is a symbol for the Mother Goddess [[Shakti]] from Hinduism.<ref name=":453" /> The performance Chandrasekaran did for the work thus symbolised processes of birth, creation, and change.<ref name=":453" />

The three artists' approach to ethnic and religious identity has more recently been critiqued as a form of multicultural essentialism that reductively binds racial identities to religious affiliations, aligning with the government's insistence that racial identities had to be kept distinct under the government's version of "racial harmony".<ref name=":9" />
[[File:The_Artists_Village_41-B_Lorong_Gambas.png|thumb|238x238px|Signboard leading to 61-B Lorong Gambas, The Artists Village (1988–1990). Photo by [[Koh Nguang How]].]]

=== The Artists Village ===
{{Main|The Artists Village}}

The Artists Village (TAV) is known as Singapore's first [[art colony]], founded by contemporary artist [[Tang Da Wu]] in 1988.<ref name="nyt">{{cite web |last=Kolesnikov-Jessop |first=Sonia |date=17 August 2010 |title=Singapore's Once Unruly Young Artist, Still Poking at Social Norms |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/18/arts/18iht-leow.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608031049/https://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/18/arts/18iht-leow.html |archive-date=8 June 2020 |access-date=6 September 2011 |work=New York Times}}</ref> From 1988 to 1990, it was located at a chicken farm at Lorong Gambas in [[Sembawang|Ulu Sembawang]], which has since been redeveloped.<ref name=":02">{{cite book |last1=Seng |first1=Yu Jin |url=http://www.tav.org.sg/files/TAV20YearsOn.pdf |title=The Artists Village: 20 Years On |date=2009 |publisher=Singapore Art Museum and The Artists Village |page=13 |chapter=Re-visiting the Emergence of The Artists Village |access-date=18 January 2024 |archive-date=7 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200607153953/http://www.tav.org.sg/files/TAV20YearsOn.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> TAV is known for its engagement with societal changes and issues through late-1980s and 1990s Singapore, with a particular emphasis on performance art, [[installation art]], and [[Process art|process-based work]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Scarlett |first=Ken |date=November 1992 |title=The Shock of the Unexpected: Innovation in Singapore |journal=Art Australia |volume=55 |pages=10}}</ref><ref name=":16">{{cite book |last1=Kwok |first1=Kian Woon |url=http://www.tav.org.sg/files/TAV20YearsOn.pdf |title=The Artists Village: 20 Years On |date=2009 |publisher=Singapore Art Museum and The Artists Village |page=1 |chapter=Introduction: Locating and Positioning the Artists Village in Singapore and Beyond |access-date=18 January 2024 |archive-date=7 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200607153953/http://www.tav.org.sg/files/TAV20YearsOn.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> Other figures closely associated with TAV, apart from its founder Tang, include [[Amanda Heng]] and [[Lee Wen]].<ref name=":02" />

=== 5th Passage and performance art ban ===
{{Main|5th Passage}}
[[File:The_New_Paper's_cover_story_of_Josef_Ng's_Brother_Cane,_"Pub(l)ic_Protest",_3_Janaury_1994.jpeg|thumb|The New Paper's cover story of Josef Ng's ''Brother Cane'', "Pub(l)ic Protest", 3 January 1994|213x213px]]
The 5th Passage Artists Limited, commonly known as 5th Passage or 5th Passage Artists, was an [[artist-run initiative]] and [[contemporary art]] space in [[Singapore]] from 1991 to 1994.<ref name=":33">{{Cite journal |last=Legaspi-Ramirez |first=Eileen |date=March 2019 |title=Art on the Back Burner: Gender as the Elephant in the Room of Southeast Asian Art Histories |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/721044 |journal=Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=25–48 |doi=10.1353/sen.2019.0002 |s2cid=166232952 |access-date=8 June 2020 |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":04">{{Cite news |last=Huang |first=Lijie |date=28 July 2014 |title=Artist Suzann Victor keeps pushing boundaries to connect with the public through art |url=https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/artist-suzann-victor-keeps-pushing-boundaries-to-connect-with-the-public-through-art |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608192612/https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/artist-suzann-victor-keeps-pushing-boundaries-to-connect-with-the-public-through-art |archive-date=8 June 2020 |access-date=8 June 2020 |agency=The Straits Times}}</ref> As a registered, artist-led non-profit organisation, it was one of the earliest of its kind for early-1990s Singapore, with its initial space located at [[Parkway Parade]], a shopping centre in the east of the city.<ref name=":33" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Low |first=Yvonne |date=2011 |title=Positioning Singapore's Contemporary Art |url=https://www.academia.edu/10848347 |journal=Journal of Maritime Geopolitics and Culture |volume=2 |issue=1&2 |pages=115–137}}</ref>


5th Passage was co-founded in 1991 by artists such as [[Suzann Victor]] and [[Susie Lingham]]. Art critic [[Lee Weng Choy]] describes 5th Passage as an initiative that had "focussed on issues of gender and [[Identity politics|identity]], and on the work of women artists."<ref name=":23" /> The initiative's programming emphasised an interdisciplinary approach, exhibiting [[performance art]], [[Installation art|installation]], music, photography, and design,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Nurjuwita |first=Dewi |date=28 August 2018 |title=Q&A: Suzann Victor on paving her way as a female Singaporean artist in the 1980s |url=https://www.lifestyleasia.com/sg/culture/art-design/qa-suzann-victor-shares-paved-way-female-singaporean-artist-1980s/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608200522/https://www.lifestyleasia.com/sg/culture/art-design/qa-suzann-victor-shares-paved-way-female-singaporean-artist-1980s/ |archive-date=8 June 2020 |access-date=9 June 2020 |website=Lifestyle Asia}}</ref> also organising public readings and forums.<ref name=":23" /><ref name=":33" /><ref name=":04" />
The three artists' approach to ethnic and religious identity has since been critiqued as a form of multicultural essentialism that reductively bound racial identities to religious affiliations, further aligning with the state's insistence that racial identities had to be kept distinct under the nation's version of "racial harmony".<ref name=":9" />


5th Passage is often associated with its role in staging the controversial 1994 performance artwork by [[Josef Ng]], ''Brother Cane''.<ref name=":23" /> Sensationalised media coverage of the performance led to a national outcry, leading to the eviction of 5th Passage from Parkway Parade and a ten-year suspension of funding for unscripted performance art in Singapore in what has been described as one of the "darkest moments of Singapore’s contemporary art scene."<ref name=":23" /><ref name=":52" />
=== The Artists Village, 5th Passage, and performance art ===
[[File:Suzann_Victor_Still_Waters_1998.jpg|thumb|222x222px|[[Suzann Victor]] performing ''Still Waters (between estrangement and reconciliation)'' in 1998 at the [[Singapore Art Museum]]]]
{{Main|The Artists Village|5th Passage}}
In 1998, Victor performed the work ''Still Waters (between estrangement and reconciliation)'' at the [[Singapore Art Museum]], a rare publicly staged performance work between 1994 and 2003,<ref name=":93">{{Cite web |date=2019 |title=Curatorial Brief: Still Waters |url=http://www.singaporefringe.com/fringe2019/stillwaters.php |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200611083424/http://www.singaporefringe.com/fringe2019/stillwaters.php |archive-date=11 June 2020 |access-date=11 June 2020 |website=M1 Singapore Fringe Festival}}</ref> described by Victor as a response to the [[de facto]] performance art ban and the loss of the 5th Passage space.<ref>{{Cite web |last=See |first=Grace Ignacia |date=3 January 2019 |title=An Interview with Suzann Victor: 'Still Waters' Then & Now |url=https://theartling.com/en/artzine/an-interview-with-suzann-victor-still-waters-then-now/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200609070120/https://theartling.com/en/artzine/an-interview-with-suzann-victor-still-waters-then-now/ |archive-date=9 June 2020 |access-date=9 June 2020 |website=The Artling}}</ref>
Singapore carries a notable history of [[performance art]], with the state having enacted a de facto ban on the art form for a decade from 1994 to 2004, following a controversial performance artwork at the [[5th Passage]] art space in Singapore.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book|last=Lee|first=Weng Choy|url=https://www.academia.edu/1330638|title=Looking at Culture|date=1996|publisher=Artres Design & Communications|isbn=981-00-6714-3|editor-last=Krishnan|editor-first=S.K. Sanjay|location=Singapore|chapter=Chronology of a Controversy|editor-last2=Lee|editor-first2=Weng Choy|editor-last3=Perera|editor-first3=Leon|editor-last4=Yap|editor-first4=Jimmy|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608200204/https://www.academia.edu/1330638/Chronology_of_a_Controversy|archive-date=8 June 2020}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last=Lingham|first=Susie|date=November 2011|title=Art and Censorship in Singapore: Catch 22?|url=http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/76/ArtAndCensorshipInSingaporeCatch22|journal=ArtAsiaPacific|issue=76|access-date=8 June 2020|archive-date=15 September 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140915073253/http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/76/ArtAndCensorshipInSingaporeCatch22}}</ref>


=== 2000s onwards ===
=== 2000s onwards ===
In 2001, Singapore participated in the [[Venice Biennale]] with its own national pavilion for the first time, with artists [[Henri Chen KeZhan]], Matthew Ngui, [[Salleh Japar]], and [[Suzann Victor]] exhibiting work.<ref name=":453">{{Cite book |last=Toh |first=Charmaine |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |date=2015 |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |isbn=978-981-09-7384-1 |editor-last=Low |editor-first=Sze Wee |pages=90–103 |chapter=Shifting Grounds}}</ref> Singapore continued its participation in the Venice Biennale with the exception of 2013, when the National Arts Council reassessed its participation in future biennales and resumed in 2015 after signing a 20-year lease on a national pavilion at the Arsenale in Venice.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Nanda |first=Akshita |date=6 May 2015 |title=Singapore signs 20-year lease on Venice Biennale pavilion |work=The Straits Times |url=https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/singapore-signs-20-year-lease-on-venice-biennale-pavilion |access-date=22 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151124182411/https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/singapore-signs-20-year-lease-on-venice-biennale-pavilion |archive-date=24 November 2015}}</ref> [[Documenta11]] in 2002 would see the participation of [[Charles Lim]] and Woon Tien Wei as the [[internet art]] collective tsunamii.net, presenting the work ''alpha 3.4'' (2002).<ref>{{Cite web |date=27 October 2016 |title=alpha 3.4 |url=https://anthology.rhizome.org/alpha-3-4 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210201153743/https://anthology.rhizome.org/alpha-3-4 |archive-date=1 February 2021 |access-date=22 May 2021 |website=Rhizome Net Art Anthology}}</ref> After several years of hosting large-scale exhibitions such as the [[Singapore Art Show]], the Nokia Singapore Art series, and SENI Singapore in 2004, Singapore launched the inaugural [[Singapore Biennale]] in 2006.<ref name=":295">{{Cite web |last1=Lim |first1=Siew Kim |last2=Goh |first2=Lee Kim |date=2017 |title=Singapore Biennale |url=https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_1363_2008-07-31.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200715174457/https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_1363_2008-07-31.html |archive-date=15 July 2020 |access-date=21 October 2020 |website=NLB Infopedia}}</ref>
In 2001, Singapore participated in the [[Venice Biennale]] with its own national pavilion for the first time, with artists [[Henri Chen KeZhan]], Matthew Ngui, [[Salleh Japar]], and [[Suzann Victor]] exhibiting work.<ref name=":453">{{Cite book |last=Toh |first=Charmaine |title=Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century |date=2015 |publisher=National Gallery Singapore |isbn=978-981-09-7384-1 |editor-last=Low |editor-first=Sze Wee |pages=90–103 |chapter=Shifting Grounds}}</ref> Singapore continued its participation in the Venice Biennale with the exception of 2013, when the National Arts Council reassessed its participation in future biennales and resumed in 2015 after signing a 20-year lease on a national pavilion at the Arsenale in Venice.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Nanda |first=Akshita |date=6 May 2015 |title=Singapore signs 20-year lease on Venice Biennale pavilion |work=The Straits Times |url=https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/singapore-signs-20-year-lease-on-venice-biennale-pavilion |access-date=22 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151124182411/https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/singapore-signs-20-year-lease-on-venice-biennale-pavilion |archive-date=24 November 2015}}</ref> [[Documenta11]] in 2002 would see the participation of [[Charles Lim]] and Woon Tien Wei as the [[internet art]] collective tsunamii.net, presenting the work ''alpha 3.4'' (2002).<ref>{{Cite web |date=27 October 2016 |title=alpha 3.4 |url=https://anthology.rhizome.org/alpha-3-4 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210201153743/https://anthology.rhizome.org/alpha-3-4 |archive-date=1 February 2021 |access-date=22 May 2021 |website=Rhizome Net Art Anthology}}</ref> After several years of hosting large-scale exhibitions such as the [[Singapore Art Show]], the Nokia Singapore Art series, and SENI Singapore in 2004, Singapore launched the inaugural [[Singapore Biennale]] in 2006.<ref name=":295">{{Cite web |last1=Lim |first1=Siew Kim |last2=Goh |first2=Lee Kim |date=2017 |title=Singapore Biennale |url=https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_1363_2008-07-31.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200715174457/https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_1363_2008-07-31.html |archive-date=15 July 2020 |access-date=21 October 2020 |website=NLB Infopedia}}</ref>
[[File:CC4_Promenade_Platform_B_with_artwork_20200902_142340.jpg|thumb|300x300px|[[PHUNK]], ''Dreams in Social Cosmic Odyssey'', 2010, [[Promenade MRT station]] in Singapore]]
[[File:CC4_Promenade_Platform_B_with_artwork_20200902_142340.jpg|thumb|220x220px|[[PHUNK]], ''Dreams in Social Cosmic Odyssey'', 2010, [[Promenade MRT station]] in Singapore]]
In 2003, the "Art in Transit" (AIT) initiative was established by the [[Land Transport Authority]] (LTA) in tandem with the completion of the [[North East MRT line|North East Line]] on the country's [[Mass Rapid Transit (Singapore)|Mass Rapid Transit]] (MRT) system.<ref name="Massot 2020">{{Cite web |date=7 April 2020 |title=Getting Around - Public Transport - A Better Public Transport Experience - Art in Transit |url=https://www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/getting_around/public_transport/a_better_public_transport_experience/art_in_transit.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200421081559/https://www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/getting_around/public_transport/a_better_public_transport_experience/art_in_transit.html |archive-date=21 April 2020 |access-date=23 June 2022 |website=LTA}}</ref> The initiative gave MRT stations specially commissioned permanent artworks by Singaporean artists in a wide variety of art styles and mediums, including sculptures, murals and mosaics often integrated into the stations' interior architecture.<ref name="Massot 2020" /><ref name="AIT">{{Cite web |title=Art in Transit brochure |url=http://www.lta.gov.sg/public_transport/doc/Art%20in%20Transit%20brochure.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050830161228/http://www.lta.gov.sg/public_transport/doc/Art%20in%20Transit%20brochure.pdf |archive-date=30 August 2005 |access-date=23 June 2022 |publisher=Land Transport Authority}}</ref> With over 300 art pieces across 80 stations, it is Singapore's largest [[public art]] programme.<ref name="Massot 2020" /><ref>{{Cite news |last=Lim |first=Melanie |date=19 November 2019 |title=LTA looking for artists to spruce up Punggol Coast MRT station, applications close Dec. 19, 2019 |language=en |work=Mothership |publisher=Bridgewater Holdings Pte Ltd |url=https://mothership.sg/2019/11/lta-punggol-coast-mrt-artists/ |url-status=live |access-date=23 June 2022 |archive-date=27 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220327090903/https://mothership.sg/2019/11/lta-punggol-coast-mrt-artists/ }}</ref>
In 2003, the "Art in Transit" (AIT) initiative was established by the [[Land Transport Authority]] (LTA) in tandem with the completion of the [[North East MRT line|North East Line]] on the country's [[Mass Rapid Transit (Singapore)|Mass Rapid Transit]] (MRT) system.<ref name="Massot 2020">{{Cite web |date=7 April 2020 |title=Getting Around - Public Transport - A Better Public Transport Experience - Art in Transit |url=https://www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/getting_around/public_transport/a_better_public_transport_experience/art_in_transit.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200421081559/https://www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/getting_around/public_transport/a_better_public_transport_experience/art_in_transit.html |archive-date=21 April 2020 |access-date=23 June 2022 |website=LTA}}</ref> The initiative gave MRT stations specially commissioned permanent artworks by Singaporean artists in a wide variety of art styles and mediums, including sculptures, murals and mosaics often integrated into the stations' interior architecture.<ref name="Massot 2020" /><ref name="AIT">{{Cite web |title=Art in Transit brochure |url=http://www.lta.gov.sg/public_transport/doc/Art%20in%20Transit%20brochure.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050830161228/http://www.lta.gov.sg/public_transport/doc/Art%20in%20Transit%20brochure.pdf |archive-date=30 August 2005 |access-date=23 June 2022 |publisher=Land Transport Authority}}</ref> With over 300 art pieces across 80 stations, it is Singapore's largest [[public art]] programme.<ref name="Massot 2020" /><ref>{{Cite news |last=Lim |first=Melanie |date=19 November 2019 |title=LTA looking for artists to spruce up Punggol Coast MRT station, applications close Dec. 19, 2019 |language=en |work=Mothership |publisher=Bridgewater Holdings Pte Ltd |url=https://mothership.sg/2019/11/lta-punggol-coast-mrt-artists/ |url-status=live |access-date=23 June 2022 |archive-date=27 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220327090903/https://mothership.sg/2019/11/lta-punggol-coast-mrt-artists/ }}</ref>



Revision as of 05:25, 4 March 2024

Singaporean art
Chua Mia Tee, National Language Class, 1959, Oil on canvas, 112 x 153 cm, Installation view at the National Gallery Singapore

The visual art of Singapore, or Singaporean art, refers to all forms of visual art in or associated with Singapore throughout its history and towards the present-day. The history of Singaporean art includes the indigenous artistic traditions of the Malay Archipelago and the diverse visual practices of itinerant artists and migrants from China, the Indian subcontinent, and Europe.[1]

Singaporean art includes the sculptural, textile, and decorative art traditions of the Malay world; portraiture, landscapes, sculpture, printmaking, and natural history drawings from the country's British colonial period; along with Chinese-influenced Nanyang style paintings, social realist art, abstract art, and photography practices emerging in the post-war period.[1] Today, it includes the contemporary art practices of post-independence Singapore, such as performance art, conceptual art, installation art, video art, sound art, and new media art.[2] The emergence of modern Singaporean art, or more specifically, "the emergence of self-aware artistic expression"[1] is often tied to the rise of art associations, art schools, and exhibitions in the 20th century, though this has since been expanded to include earlier forms of visual representation, such as from Singapore's pre-colonial periods.[3][4]

Presently, the contemporary art of Singapore also circulates internationally through art biennales and other major international exhibitions. Contemporary art in Singapore tends to examine themes of "hyper-modernity and the built environment; alienation and changing social mores; post-colonial identities and multiculturalism."[5] Across these tendencies, "the exploration of performance and the performative body" is a common running thread.[5] Singapore carries a notable history of performance art, with the government historically having enacted a no-funding rule for that specific art form from 1994 to 2003, following a controversial performance artwork at the 5th Passage art space.[6][7]

Ancient Singapore

Artefacts and artistic traditions of the Malay world

Situated in the Malay Archipelago, Singapore is connected to the broader sculptural, textile, and decorative art traditions of the Malay world.[1]

Javanese-style gold jewellery discovered at Bukit Larangan (Fort Canning Hill), 14th century, National Museum of Singapore

A 14th-century golden armlet bearing a repoussé plaque of the Javanese Kala was excavated from Bukit Larangan (Fort Canning Hill) in 1926, demonstrating a link between Singapore and classical Malay sultanates.[8] The kala motif draws from Hindu mythology, and traditionally adorns the top of main entrances of temples and is found in many parts of Indonesia.[8] Demonstrating the use of metalworking techniques, the armlet dates back to the 14th century, around the time a possible Kingdom of Singapura would have been thriving on the island, complementing indigenous Malay writings about the presence of a state in Singapore headed by a Malay elite.[8] The armlet also demonstrates the influence of the Hindu cosmology for Malays in their pre-Islamic past.[8]

A fragment of the Singapore Stone, inscribed with an unknown script, c 10th to 13th century.

Another significant artefact is the Singapore Stone, a surviving fragment of a large sandstone slab inscribed with Indic script that stood at the mouth of the Singapore River, measuring 3 metres in height and width. Believed to date back to at least the 13th century and possibly as early as the 10th or 11th century, the inscription remains undeciphered. More recent theories suggest that the inscription is either in Old Javanese or in Sanskrit, which suggests the possibility that the island was an extension of the Majapahit civilisation in the past. About January 1843,[9] the slab was blown to pieces to widen the passageway at the mouth of the Singapore River to make space for Fort Fullerton and for the quarters of its commander, leaving only fragments of the slab.[10][11]

Early cartographic references

Ptolemy, Geographia, VIII. 11th Map of Asia. Sabana given at the tip of the Malay Peninsula which was named as the Golden Khersonese.

The earliest depictions of ancient Singapore existed predominantly in textual and cartographical forms, with the first possible mention being a 2nd-century CE cartographic reference in Greco-Roman astronomer Ptolemy's Geographia. A place called Sabana or Sabara was marked on the 11th Map of Asia at the southern tip of the Golden Khersonese (meaning the Malay Peninsula) where Singapore may lie.[12]

The Mao Kun map from Wubei Zhi which is based on the early 15th century maps of Zheng He showing Temasek (あわすず) at the top left, and Long Ya Men (りゅうきばもん) on the right panel.

Early Singapore came to be known as "Temasek", a name possibly deriving from "tasik" (Malay for lake or sea) and taken to mean Sea-town in Malay.[13] The landscape of Temasek (あわすず) is visually depicted in the Mao Kun map, a set of navigation charts published in the Ming dynasty military treatise Wubei Zhi.[14] Long Ya Men (りゅうきばもん, Dragon's Teeth Gate) is also depicted within the map, believed to be the entrance to Keppel Harbour.[15][16] In his work Daoyi Zhilüe, Wang Dayuan described Long Ya Men as the two hills of Temasek that looked like "Dragon's teeth" between which a strait runs; Longyamen was written about here as one of two settlements in Temasek, the second being Banzu.[15][16] The map is often regarded as a surviving document from the expeditions of Zheng He, in addition to accounts written by Zheng's officers.

Sometime in its history, the name of Temasek was changed to Singapura. The Sejarah Melayu (Malay Annals) contains a tale of a prince of Srivijaya, Sri Tri Buana (also known as Sang Nila Utama), who landed on Temasek after surviving a storm in the 13th century. According to the tale, the prince saw a strange creature, which he was told was a lion; believing this to be an auspicious sign, he decided to found a settlement called Singapura, which means "Lion City" in Sanskrit. It is unlikely there ever were lions in Singapore, though tigers continued to roam the island until the early 20th century.

Colonial Singapore (1819–1942)

From the 16th to 19th centuries, starting with the arrival of the Portuguese at Malacca in 1509, the Malay Archipelago was gradually taken over by European colonial powers. During the 17th century, the early dominance of the Portuguese was challenged by the Dutch, who came to control most of the ports in the region, while colonial powers such as the British had a relatively minor presence. Sir Stamford Raffles, appointed as the Lieutenant Governor of the British colony at Bencoolen in 1818, arrived in Singapore on 28 January 1819 and soon recognised the island as a choice for a new port. Raffles sought to challenge the Dutch by establishing a new port along the Straits of Malacca, which served as the main ship passageway for India-China trade. A formal treaty was signed on 6 February 1819, ushering in Singapore's colonial period.[17][18] The British concentrated on building infrastructure such as housing, roads, and hospitals in order to maintain the economy, and did not set up an art academy.[19] While Raffles did intend for the teaching of art, the first British art teacher, Richard Walker, would only arrive almost a hundred years after Raffles' death in 1923.[19]

During this period, the art of Singapore was diverse, influenced by travellers, itinerant artists, and migrants from China, the Indian subcontinent, as well as the West, all bringing different pictorial traditions.[1] From the 19th century, European perecptions of Singapore are seen through art that depicted "tropical" motifs like palm trees, kampungs, and studies of locals.[1] These motifs appear in the works of Singapore artists from the 1930s onwards.[1]

Early visual records as a British settlement (19th century)

Philip Jackson, A View of Singapore from the Sea, June 1823, Pencil sketch
John Michael Houghton, Singapore from the Rocky Point, 1819, 1819, 13 x 18 cm, National Museum of Singapore

The earliest visual records of Singapore as a British settlement are 19th century images produced for marine coastal surveying.[1] One of the earliest is Singapore from the Rocky Point, 1819, a wash drawing by John Michael Houghton, a midshipman on board the HMS Discovery, part of the naval escort accompanying Raffles on his journey to Singapore in 1819.[20] Created when Raffles first set foot on Singapore, it is one of 41 drawings from the Houghton Album, a compilation of views drawn by Houghton.[20] Other early hydrographic sketches include Philip Jackson's A View of Singapore from the Sea, dated 1823, and others by an unknown draughtsman on a marine ship accompanying Raffles during his survey of Karimun Islands, Sketch of the Land round Singapore Harbour, dated February 1819, and Sketch of the Settlement of Singapore at anchor in 4 fathoms, dated April 1819.[1]

Robert Wilson Wiber, Panoramic View of Singapore from the Harbour, 1849, Watercolour and gouache on paper, 32 x 67.5 cm

These sketches were used for navigational purposes, though they visually resemble later landscape works created mainly for artistic expression.[1] For example, Robert Wilson Wiber's watercolour painting, Panoramic View of Singapore from the Harbour (1849) depicts the island from the perspective of the sea.[1] Singapore was largely known as a British port in the 19th century, with popular representations of Singapore including harbour and port scenes.[1] Some of the early artists painting Singapore include John Turnbull Thomson and Charles Andrew Dyce, British officers in colonial Singapore who also worked in fields like surveying, architecture, and engineering.[1]

Heinrich Leutemann, Unterbrochene Straßenmessung auf Singapore (Interrupted Road Surveying in Singapore), c. 1865, Wood engraving on paper, National Museum of Singapore

In 1865, the German popular spreadsheet Die Gartenlaube published the article "Die Tigernoth in Singapore," which begins with an account of an escaped jaguar from a local zoo. It continues with George Drumgoole Coleman's encounter with a tiger during a surveying trip near a jungle in Singapore in 1835.[1] A lithographic print by Heinrich Leutemann accompanies the article. Titled Unterbrochene Straßenmessung auf Singapore (Road Surveying Interrupted in Singapore) (c. 1865–1885), it depicts the dramatic scene of the tiger leaping out from the jungle, knocking over Coleman's theodolite.[1] The work has been of significant interest to recent scholarship, which focuses on the historical and metaphorical significance of the tiger.[1] It has been suggested that the incident was exaggerated or did not truly occur, emphasising the imaginary surrounding the supposed dangers of the Southeast Asian jungle.[1]

Natural history drawings

William Farquhar commissioned natural history drawings during his time as Resident of Malacca from 1803 to 1818. These were some of the earliest visual practices of the region.[1]

Early photography

Jules Itier's 1844 daguerreotype of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill, 1844, 12.6 x 15 x 0.3 cm, National Museum of Singapore

The earliest surviving photographic views of Singapore as a British settlement are Jules Itier's 1844 daguerreotype of Boat Quay and Singapore River from Government Hill.[21]

Sculpture in colonial Singapore

Annaratnam Gunaratnam, Mavis, 1953, Bronze sculpture, 49.0 x 37.0 x 22.0 cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore

Annaratnam Gunnaratnam was a sculptor who was also the head of the art department of Raffles Girls' Secondary School in Singapore from 1948 to 1968.[22] She specialised in portrait sculptures, being commissioned to create sculptures of Mahatma Gandhi and Swami Vivekananda for the Ramakrishna Mission Bartley Road, Singapore.[22] Her sculpture, Mavis, demonstrates Gunnaratnam's technical ability in casting and depicting realist female sculptural forms with dignity, capturing details like the subject's facial expression and folds in her clothes.[22]

Malay printed material

Singapore holds examples of the Malay Archipelago's tradition of illuminated manuscripts and early illustrated Malay newspapers, demonstrating the presence of visual modernity in the region during the 19th century.[1][23]

A page of the Hikayat Abdullah (1849) by Munshi Abdullah, written in Malay in the Jawi script, Collection of the National Library of Singapore

Scribes created illustrated motifs and decorations within books, as seen in the decorated frontispiece for the lithographic edition of Hikayat Abdullah (The Tale of Abdullah).[1] This autobiography by Abdullah Abdul Kadir, better known as Munshi Abdullah, was lithographed at the Mission Press in Singapore in 1849, one of the first Malay language books published in print and written by someone who identified as Malay.[8][23] The manuscript for Hikayat Abdullah has a frontispiece decorated with sketches of red and green floral motifs, including a simple frame.[23] Here, the illustrator experiments with scripts darkened to suggest forms and shadows, providing the illusion of depth to the decorative patterns.[23]

Front page of Jawi Peranakan on 16 January 1888, featuring an illustrated logo at its masthead

An early example of a Malay newspaper was the Jawi Peranakan, circulating from 1876 to 1895 for locals in Malaya.[23] It was published in Jawi script and produced in Singapore as a main trading hub in the region.[23] Jawi Peranakan had an illustrated logo depicting a pohon beringin (banyan tree) frame, which contained elaborate mirrored Jawi typography, contained within a garland.[23]

Though Malay printing in the region was closely linked to the production of religious texts, publishing grew in its role in marketing, politics, and entertainment during the 20th century.[24] There was a push for Malay identity to be viewed from more local or ‘peninsular’ perspectives, with Malay identity no longer strictly Islamic.[24] Beyond text, discourse about Malay identity took visual form in 1930s satirical editorial cartoons and illustrated advertisements.[24]

Art associations, schools, and exhibitions

Low Kway Song, Lynx, 1921, Oil on canvas, 58.5 x 45 cm

The emergence of modern Singaporean art is often tied to the rise of art associations, art schools, and exhibitions in the 20th century.[3] In 1909, the Amateur Drawing Association was founded.[25] Led by its first president Tan Kok Tiong, had a club house in Amoy Street and a membership of about 50 in its first year.[25] The association's activities included "drawing, literary pursuits and physical culture," but as there were few "drawing members" in spite of an exhibition of members' drawings held in February 1913.[25] The Amateur Drawing Association suggests a social network of art enthusiasts who were associated with the Straits Chinese and British elite.[25]

Low Kway Song's Lynx (1921) and Thai Temple (1923) are art historically notable as some of the few oil paintings from Singapore that can be traced to this moment of artistic production in the early 20th century.[25]

Japanese Occupation (1942–1945)

Richard Walker, Epiphany, 1942, Oil on board, 70 x 97 cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore.

Artistic activity slowed down after World War II arrived in Singapore, with works reflecting artist's varied experiences of the war.[1] Richard Walker's Epiphany (1942) was likely painted as a makeshift altarpiece in Changi Prison during the artist's internment there during the war.[25] It is an oil painting that depicts the Virgin Mary as an Asian woman, suggesting the universality of Christian religious values.[25]

In 1946, just after the war had ended, Liu Kang published Chop Suey, a multi-volume series of sketches that depicted Japanese brutality during wartime Malaya.[26]

Post-war period (1945–1955)

Society of Malay Artists Malaya (Late 1940s–50s)

Mohammed Salehuddin, Malay House, Malacca, c. 1960, Oil on canvas, 61 x 81.3 cm

On 1 May 1949 at the Kota Raja Club in Singapore's Kampung Glam,[27] artists Mahat bin Chadang (C. Mahat) and Mohammed Salehuddin founded the Persatuan Pelukis Melayu Malaya (PPMM, Society of Malay Artists Malaya).[27][28][29][30] The founding of the society is seen as an early instance of collective artistic organisation for Malay artists in Singapore.[29]

PPMM artists did not follow a specific style, with artists such as Mohammad Salehuddin experimenting with cubism in his watercolour painting Bahana Asmara (Echo of Love), which depicted a sensual female nude with distorted features, while also being a comic illustrator.[27] In contrast, his later painting from around 1960, Malay House, Malacca, accurately depicts a Malaccan-style longhouse in a realistic manner, down to the floral tiles of the staircase, demonstrating the PPMM artists' wide range of styles.[31]

Nanyang Style (Late 1940s–50s)

Georgette Chen, Sweet Rambutans, 1965, Oil on canvas

Artists such as Chen Wen Hsi, Cheong Soo Pieng, and Fan Chang Tien, affected by tumultuous sociopolitical changes in China, moved to Singapore from the 1930s onwards, creating conditions for a unique local art movement called the Nanyang style of painting.[1] The name of the movement draws from "Nanyang" (Chinese: 南洋なんよう; pinyin: nán yáng; lit. 'Southern Ocean'), a sinocentric Chinese term that refers to Southeast Asia from the geographical perspective of China.[32]

Migrant Chinese artists painting in the Nanyang style from the late 1940s to 1960s are some of the most well-known visual practices in the history of Singapore art.[32] As immigrant artists attracted to unfamiliar tropical landscapes, the Nanyang artists painted local Southeast Asian landscapes and subject matter such as tropical fruit, kampung scenes, and batik fabric while combining Western watercolor, oil painting, and Chinese ink traditions.[33] Some of the most well-known Nanyang artists are Georgette Chen, Chen Chong Swee, Chen Wen Hsi, Cheong Soo Pieng, and Liu Kang.[34]

Liu Kang, Artist and Model, 1954, Oil on canvas, 84 x 124cm, Collection of National Gallery Singapore

The Nanyang artists Liu Kang, Cheong Soo Pieng, Chen Wen Hsi, and Chen Chong Swee famously embarked on a 1952 painting trip to Bali, creating paintings of Balinese landscapes and people.[33] Based on a sketch from this trip, Liu Kang's Artist and Model (1954) is a painting of fellow artist Chen Wen Hsi while he sketches a Balinese woman.[33] The white outlines used in the painting are said to be inspired by batik painting.[33]

Pictorialism and salon photography (1950s–60s)

Pictorialism by photographers in Singapore is defined as "an assertion of individual expression that manifested as a distinct pluralism of styles and subject matter", with an emphasis on "expression and beauty" in their photographs.[35] This is different from earlier pictorial photographers in Europe and North America, who were working towards getting photography recognised as fine art.[35] Singaporean photographers, who had art exhibitions featuring photographs with paintings from 1951, did not face the same tensions between photography and painting, and were thus more open to a variety of photographic styles.[35]

Self-government (1955–1963)

Social Realism and the Equator Art Society (mid-1950s–70s)

The Equator Art Society was an artists' group founded in 1956 in Singapore, known for promoting social realist art.[36][37] The Equator Art Society sought to represent the realities and struggles of the masses, depicting Singapore's working classes and the poor often through the use of portraiture painting, woodcut prints, and sculpture.[36]

Internationalism and abstract art

Kim Lim, Column, 1971–72, Stainless steel, 5 parts, each 21.7 x 27 x 51 cm

Artists such as Anthony Poon, Thomas Yeo, Goh Beng Kwan, and Kim Lim were influenced by their time overseas, with their work reminiscent of the visual language of Abstract Expressionism, Op Art, and Minimalism.[38] For example, Singaporean-British artist Kim Lim's stainless steel sculpture, Column (1971–72), has been seen as an instance of Minimalist art in Britain.[39]

Association of Artists of Various Resources (APAD)

In April 1961, the art section of Lembaga Tetap Kongres Bahasa dan Kebudayaan Melayu (LTK, Permanent Board of Congress of Malay Language and Culture) staged a major exhibition at the Victoria Memorial Hall. The exhibition featured the works of 34 Malay artists, both established and emerging.[30] The exhibition publication documented works in the show from established artists such as C. Mahat, Sulaiman Haji Suhaimi, M. Salehuddin, M. Sawoot, Aman Ahmad, and younger artists like Abdul Ghani Hamid, S. Mohdir, S. Mahdar and Rohani Ismail.[30] Calls for an art society for Malay artists led to the formation of the Angkatan Pelukis Aneka Daya (APAD, Association of Artists of Various Resources) in July 1962.[30] APAD was led by Abdul Ghani Hamid, Muhammad Ali Sabran, S. Mohdir, Ahmin Haji Noh, Hamidah M. F. Suhaimi and Mustafa Yassin.[30] Other members that came to contribute to APAD include Rohani Ismail, Maisara (Sara) Dariat, Rosma Mahyuddin Guha, and Hamidah Jalil.[40]

The association continues to organise solo and group exhibitions, also collaborating with other cultural groups, art societies, and institutions, locally and regionally.[30]

Merger with Malaysia (1963–1965)

On 16 September 1963, the merger between Malaya, Singapore, North Borneo (renamed Sabah), and Sarawak took place, marking the official formation of Malaysia.[41]

Modern Art Society

The Modern Art Society (MAS), launched with Ho Ho Ying as president in 1963, organised the exhibition titled Modern Art at the National Library from 12 October to 27 October 1963.[42] The aims of the MAS included "the promotion of modern art in Malaysia," with the use of "Malaysia" rather than 'Malaya' or 'Singapore' pointing to this specific period when Singapore was part of Malaysia.[42] The MAS hoped for the Modern Art exhibition to travel through Malaysia, including to cities like Kuala Lumpur.[42]

The Modern Art exhibition was given prominent local media coverage, especially through Chinese newspapers and English-language The Straits Times.[42] A week into the Modern Art exhibition, a painting by Tay Chee Toh was reported in the newspapers to have been slashed by another artist whose practice the MAS had rejected as outmoded, demonstrating the tensions surrounding abstract painting and its role in society.[42] The founding of the MAS thus positioned abstract painting as a modern visual language in 1960s Singapore, instead of social realist painting.[42]

Republic of Singapore (1965–present)

Cheo Chai-Hiang, 5' x 5' (Singapore River), 1972, remade for display in 2006, Mixed media, 150 x 150 cm

The 1970s saw artists shift away from modern art practices like sculpture and painting, towards contemporary art practices like video, installation, and conceptual art.[43] Contemporary art in Singapore tends to examine themes of "hyper-modernity and the built environment; alienation and changing social mores; post-colonial identities and multiculturalism."[44] Across these tendencies, "the exploration of performance and the performative body" is a common running thread.[44]

For example, often seen as an early example of conceptualism in Singapore is Cheo Chai-Hiang's 5' x 5' (Singapore River), where Cheo mailed a set of instructions from London to the Modern Art Society in Singapore.[43] Here, he asked the Society to construct a square measuring 5 feet by 5 feet in the gallery space for their annual exhibition, an artwork proposal they eventually chose not to exhibit.[43]

Trimurti

S. Chandrasekaran, Visvayoni, 1988, Mixed media on fabric

In March 1988, the three artists Salleh Japar, Goh Ee Choo, and S. Chandrasekaran refused to participate in their graduation show at Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, instead holding an exhibition titled Trimurti at the Goethe-Institut in Singapore.[45] The title Trimurti refers to Hinduism's triple deity, representing creation, maintenance, and destruction.[46]

It was significant that the exhibition had a Hindu name, with Indians being an ethnic minority in Chinese-dominated Singapore and NAFA's teachers regularly teaching art in the Chinese language.[46] The exhibition thus called out cultural biases at NAFA and asserted that non-Chinese identities were equally and unquestionably Singaporean.[46]

The three artists sought to embrace differences as a collective, reflecting Singapore's multiculturalism through each of their racial and religious identities, as a Malay-Muslim for Salleh, Chinese-Buddhist for Goh, and Indian-Hindu for Chandrasekaran.[46] For example, Chandrasekaran's work Visvayoni draws upon the term "yoni," the Sanskrit word for "womb," which is a symbol for the Mother Goddess Shakti from Hinduism.[43] The performance Chandrasekaran did for the work thus symbolised processes of birth, creation, and change.[43]

The three artists' approach to ethnic and religious identity has more recently been critiqued as a form of multicultural essentialism that reductively binds racial identities to religious affiliations, aligning with the government's insistence that racial identities had to be kept distinct under the government's version of "racial harmony".[46]

Signboard leading to 61-B Lorong Gambas, The Artists Village (1988–1990). Photo by Koh Nguang How.

The Artists Village

The Artists Village (TAV) is known as Singapore's first art colony, founded by contemporary artist Tang Da Wu in 1988.[47] From 1988 to 1990, it was located at a chicken farm at Lorong Gambas in Ulu Sembawang, which has since been redeveloped.[48] TAV is known for its engagement with societal changes and issues through late-1980s and 1990s Singapore, with a particular emphasis on performance art, installation art, and process-based work.[49][50] Other figures closely associated with TAV, apart from its founder Tang, include Amanda Heng and Lee Wen.[48]

5th Passage and performance art ban

The New Paper's cover story of Josef Ng's Brother Cane, "Pub(l)ic Protest", 3 January 1994

The 5th Passage Artists Limited, commonly known as 5th Passage or 5th Passage Artists, was an artist-run initiative and contemporary art space in Singapore from 1991 to 1994.[51][52] As a registered, artist-led non-profit organisation, it was one of the earliest of its kind for early-1990s Singapore, with its initial space located at Parkway Parade, a shopping centre in the east of the city.[51][53]

5th Passage was co-founded in 1991 by artists such as Suzann Victor and Susie Lingham. Art critic Lee Weng Choy describes 5th Passage as an initiative that had "focussed on issues of gender and identity, and on the work of women artists."[6] The initiative's programming emphasised an interdisciplinary approach, exhibiting performance art, installation, music, photography, and design,[54] also organising public readings and forums.[6][51][52]

5th Passage is often associated with its role in staging the controversial 1994 performance artwork by Josef Ng, Brother Cane.[6] Sensationalised media coverage of the performance led to a national outcry, leading to the eviction of 5th Passage from Parkway Parade and a ten-year suspension of funding for unscripted performance art in Singapore in what has been described as one of the "darkest moments of Singapore’s contemporary art scene."[6][7]

Suzann Victor performing Still Waters (between estrangement and reconciliation) in 1998 at the Singapore Art Museum

In 1998, Victor performed the work Still Waters (between estrangement and reconciliation) at the Singapore Art Museum, a rare publicly staged performance work between 1994 and 2003,[55] described by Victor as a response to the de facto performance art ban and the loss of the 5th Passage space.[56]

2000s onwards

In 2001, Singapore participated in the Venice Biennale with its own national pavilion for the first time, with artists Henri Chen KeZhan, Matthew Ngui, Salleh Japar, and Suzann Victor exhibiting work.[43] Singapore continued its participation in the Venice Biennale with the exception of 2013, when the National Arts Council reassessed its participation in future biennales and resumed in 2015 after signing a 20-year lease on a national pavilion at the Arsenale in Venice.[57] Documenta11 in 2002 would see the participation of Charles Lim and Woon Tien Wei as the internet art collective tsunamii.net, presenting the work alpha 3.4 (2002).[58] After several years of hosting large-scale exhibitions such as the Singapore Art Show, the Nokia Singapore Art series, and SENI Singapore in 2004, Singapore launched the inaugural Singapore Biennale in 2006.[59]

PHUNK, Dreams in Social Cosmic Odyssey, 2010, Promenade MRT station in Singapore

In 2003, the "Art in Transit" (AIT) initiative was established by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) in tandem with the completion of the North East Line on the country's Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) system.[60] The initiative gave MRT stations specially commissioned permanent artworks by Singaporean artists in a wide variety of art styles and mediums, including sculptures, murals and mosaics often integrated into the stations' interior architecture.[60][61] With over 300 art pieces across 80 stations, it is Singapore's largest public art programme.[60][62]

In 2009, Ming Wong was the first Singaporean to receive an award at the Venice Biennale, receiving the Special Mention (Expanding Worlds) during the Biennale's Opening Ceremony for his work Life of Imitation.[2] The NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore opened in 2013 with Ute Meta Bauer as founding director, and the National Gallery Singapore opened in 2015. Singaporean art continues in its circulation, with artists such as Ho Tzu Nyen and Shubigi Rao making appearances on the 2019 edition of the ArtReview Power 100 list, which charts the most influential individuals working in contemporary art.[63][64]

Further reading

  • Abdul Ghani Hamid (1960). Sa-kilas pandang seni lukis dan perkembangannya (A Glimpse of the Arts and its Development). Singapore.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Hsü, Marco (1999). A Brief History of Malayan Art (马来亚艺术简). Translated by Lai, Chee Kien. Singapore: Millenium Books. ISBN 981-04-1639-3.
  • Nadarajan, Gunalan; Storer, Russell; Eugene, Tan (2007). Contemporary Art in Singapore. Singapore: Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore. ISBN 978-981-05-6461-2.
  • Low, Sze Wee (2015). Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century. Singapore: National Gallery Singapore. ISBN 978-981-14-0557-0.
  • Nadarajan, Gunalan; Storer, Russell; Eugene, Tan (2007). Contemporary Art in Singapore. Singapore: Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore. ISBN 978-981-05-6461-2.
  • Sabapathy, T.K. (2010). Road to Nowhere: The Quick Rise and the Long Fall of Art History in Singapore. Singapore: The Art Gallery, National Institute of Education. ISBN 978-981-08-5264-1.
  • Sabapathy, T.K. (2018). Ahmad, Mashadi; Lingham, Susie; Schoppert, Peter; Toh, Joyce (eds.). Writing the Modern: Selected Texts on Art & Art History in Singapore & Southeast Asia 1973–2015. Singapore: Singapore Art Museum. ISBN 978-981-11-5763-9.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Susanto, Melinda (2015). "Tropical Tapestry". Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century. Singapore: National Gallery Singapore. pp. 30–41. ISBN 978-981-14-0557-0.
  2. ^ a b Toh, Charmaine (2015). "Shifting Grounds". In Low, Sze Wee (ed.). Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore Since the 19th Century. National Gallery Singapore. p. 92. ISBN 978-981-09-7384-1.
  3. ^ a b Low, Sze Wee, ed. (2015). "Some Introductory Remarks". Siapa Nama Kamu? Art in Singapore since the 19th Century. Singapore: National Gallery Singapore. pp. 8–29. ISBN 978-981-09-7352-0.
  4. ^ "T.K. Sabapathy". Esplanade Offstage. 12 October 2016. Archived from the original on 27 February 2021. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  5. ^ a b Teh, David (2017). "Insular Visions: notes on video art in Singapore". The Japan Foundation Asia Center Art Studies. 3. Archived from the original on 8 January 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2021 – via Academia.org.
  6. ^ a b c d e Lee, Weng Choy (1996). "Chronology of a Controversy". In Krishnan, S.K. Sanjay; Lee, Weng Choy; Perera, Leon; Yap, Jimmy (eds.). Looking at Culture. Singapore: Artres Design & Communications. ISBN 981-00-6714-3. Archived from the original on 8 June 2020.
  7. ^ a b Lingham, Susie (November 2011). "Art and Censorship in Singapore: Catch 22?". ArtAsiaPacific (76). Archived from the original on 15 September 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e Joraimi, Faris (9 September 2017). "A History of Malay Singaporeans in Ten Objects". New Naratif. Archived from the original on 28 April 2021. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  9. ^ Abdullah bin Abdul Kadir, Hikayat Abdullah, above, at 166 n. 18.
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