Singapore Art Museum (SAM) officially launched The Everyday Museum, the museum’s long-term public art initiative presenting art projects and programmes across Singapore to inspire interest and curiosity in art. In line with its vision of being a “disappearing museum”, SAM will bring artistic interventions into everyday spaces, transforming them into cultural nodes with site-specific artworks by local and international artists.
Beginning from the Tanjong Pagar district, The Everyday Museum will support artistic development and production, while providing varied programming for the public to deepen their engagement of art.
Following the announcement of its new strategic direction in 2021, SAM has been presenting art in unexpected spaces around Singapore while actively collaborating with partners and communities to infuse art into the everyday. These include artworks on the SAM hoardings, roving exhibitions in public libraries, art presentations across other spaces such as Science Centre Singapore, as well as SAM’s new space at Tanjong Pagar Distripark.
With The Everyday Museum, SAM will continue bringing art into shared spaces throughout Singapore and become a key driver of public art; reaffirming the museum’s commitment to demonstrate the vital role of art in society.
The commissions and art programming for The Everyday Museum will be made for and alongside communities, with a focus on making art accessible to everyone. Beyond bringing vibrancy and creativity into everyday life, the initiative will allow audiences across Singapore to form new experiences of places, reconsider spatial and environmental constructions, while facilitating conversations and the spirit of collectiveness.
It will also provide local and international artists with a platform to create works in the public sphere, experiment with new mediums at a different scale, and forge interdisciplinary collaborations that connect different sectors and interest groups.
Starting with the Tanjong Pagar district, where two commissions were rolled out earlier this year, The Everyday Museum will be launching a series of site-specific public artworks that will radiate outwards to lived and communal spaces in various districts. In the next few years, members of the public can look forward to experiencing commissioned artworks at spaces such as neighbourhoods, public parks, spaces of work and leisure.
Wayang Spaceship by Singaporean artist Ming Wong, commissioned by The Everyday Museum with the generous support of Sun Venture, is a site-specific work presented as a reimagining of a mobile Chinese opera wayang stage. Exploring convergences between Chinese opera and science fiction, this mixed media project emerges from Wong’s enduring interest and connection with performative genres and is the artist’s most extensive manifestation of the project to date.
The installation contemplates upon the history and evolving form of Chinese opera through the years, exploring the human condition with the cosmos through the figure of the scholar-warrior, a time-travelling consciousness who traverses memories of the past, present and future.
Understood to be an avatar of Wong, the scholar-warrior is present within the futuristic installation as a consciousness that moves through and within time in endless spirals, wielding both brush and sword in a quest to discover how information technology drives historical conceptions and the future of Asia.
Situated prominently with the Singapore seaport as its backdrop, Wayang Spaceship seeks to reflect upon the intersections between the island’s cultural forms borne from migration and contemporary technology. Based on the inquiry, “Does technology drive history?”, the work inspires audiences to consider Singapore’s connections with oceanic narratives in a moment when the category of ‘contemporary culture’ shifts rapidly through a combination of received knowledge and technological advances.
By day, the work seemingly remains dormant and mirrors the seaport and the movements of the post-industrial surroundings at Tanjong Pagar Distripark. At dusk, around 7.00pm each day, the spaceship is activated through an array of light, sound and moving images, evoking the colours of Chinese opera scenes and costumes from a distant space and time, conveyed through the figure of the scholar-warrior.
To create the Wayang Spaceship, the artist worked with a close-knit network of collaborators including master stage-builder Lee Beng Seng, architect Randy Chan with ZARCH Collaboratives, and artist Liam Morgan, incorporating a combination of materials such as timber poles and planks from maritime Southeast Asia, mirror-reflective surfaces developed using dichroic films and polythene sheeting commonly used in the agricultural industry.
The Wayang Spaceship will evolve over a period featuring a range of performances and programmes. The project will also be archived on a dedicated website featuring the artist’s writings alongside curatorial and art historical texts.
Two other public artworks had been commissioned by The Everyday Museum with the support of Mapletree and are sited in the public areas of Tanjong Pagar Distripark, where SAM’s new space opened in January 2022. They are The Oort Cloud and the Blue Mountain: Edition Tanjong Pagar Distripark (2022) by Hazel Lim-Schlegel and Andreas Schlegel, in collaboration with neuewave, and Creatif Compleks (2018/2022) by Michael Lee. With the launch of The Everyday Museum, these two artworks will join Wayang Spaceship as part of the first series of public artworks within the district.
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