Creative studio ToNewEntities is proud to present “Crossroads”, a new annual art festival celebrating new media art in Southeast Asia. Part of Singapore Art Week 2022 and supported by the National Arts Council, the festival embraces the open-ended genre of artistic practice utilizing new media with 6 local artists from 14-16 and 21-23 January 2022.
Taking its name from the term used to refer to intersections and crucial decisions, the first edition of Crossroads is set to screen on major billboard displays at ION Orchard and Ten Square from 7.30PM to 8.00PM. Inspired by recent events that have forced society to many a crossroad - the global pandemic and rapid technological advancements - “Crossroads” prompts audiences to reconsider our interactions with structures that shape our collective lived experiences.
First of its kind in Southeast Asia, the thematic experience ranges from animated films, computer-generated imagery and generative art made completely accessible in public spaces. The list of featured artists include visual artists Phua Juan Yong, Howie Kim, Juria Toramae, Priyageetha Dia and Tristan Lim, as well as graphic designer trio Hause.
With Crossroads, ToNewEntities seeks to break the boundaries of how art can be experienced, by taking over public areas or living spaces typically reserved for everyday commercial use. This allows the man on the street to encounter art more easily, and therefore, rethink the idea of art. The first edition specifically aims to afford a moment in time to renegotiate our relationship with cultural consumption, through thematic new media art pieces on mass advertising display screens.
Defying static categorisation, “Crossroads” presents New Media Art by 6 diverse local multidisciplinary artists from 7.30PM to 8.00PM at ION outdoor screen and Ten Square outdoor screen.
Singapore visual artist Howie Kim presents his whimsical style with Bongdirk on the Big Screen. Featuring a flashy pink character changing between 9 iconic pop culture dress ups, such as Marilyn Monroe, Sailor Moon and Coke, Howie brings a light-hearted, comedic touch to commercialism.
Singapore based photographer and visual artist Juria Toramae extends her practicein the oceanic space with Pelagic Dreams 2 (Redux). The hypnotic video piece layers fictional and metamorphic morphologies based on her personal documentation of marine species in Southeast Asian waters.
Graphic Designer trio Hause pushes a cheeky and literal take of how the public would experience the festival with 3A, while artist Tristan Lim speculates a biological crossroad between vertebrates and invertebrates in Notochord 01, as a hallmark of how creatures evolved or would have evolved.
New media artist Phua Juan Yong, offers us a glimpse of his fantastical world with Spring/Summer, a cheeky take on adverts in a style reminiscent of old Shanghainese posters. The artist probes the exploration of agency, with the exit of the model from the frame and an encroachment of beautiful flowers.
Singaporean interdisciplinary visual artist Priyageetha Dia draws from science fiction author Octavia E. Butler for Blood Sun. Looking at the notion of crossroads as a form of hybrid space, she presents a piece reimagining an alternate futuristic paradigm that negotiates the human and non-human, and land relations.
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