Sunday, 1 July 2007

p-10 Picks (2 - 8 July)

Dear friend,

Do check out these art events happening elsewhere in Singapore this week:

1. Screening: Fri to Sun (6 to 8 July)

Night Cries

Gallery Theatre, National Museum of Singapore (93 Stamford Rd)

Free

This is a showcase of award-winning works of indigenous filmmakers from Australia and New Zealand. Tracy Moffatt's groundbreaking short film Nice Coloured Girls will be screened along with an installation of Love at the foyer. For screening schedule and more info, see www.nationalmuseum.sg.

2. Now – Sat (7 July)

Pablo Picasso: The Vollard Suite

Singapore Tyler Print Institute (41 Robertson Quay)

Mon-Sat: 10am - 6pm

Free

This first-ever solo show by Picasso in Singapore showcases his rare and complete set of 100 etchings, aquatints and drypoints made from 1930-37.

3. Now – 30 July

Quis Custodiet Custodiam?

By Menno Aden

Your MOTHER gallery (91A Hindoo Rd)

By appointment only (call 9787 7874)

Free

In this exhibition entitled Who is Watching the Watchers?, Aden (Germany) has transferred film stills of closed circuit television onto canvas, showing short moments of other people’s lives and turning the viewers into voyeurs. For more info, see http://www.geocities.com/madlynettepress/quiscustodietcustodiam.html.

Have a great week ahead!

Regards,

Jennifer.


Monday, 25 June 2007

p-10 Picks (25 June - 1 July)

Dear friend,

Here are our picks of the art events happening in Singapore this week:

1. Talk: Sat (30 June), 3pm

An ‘Extra Ordinary’ Talk

Plastique Kinetic Worms (61/63 Kerbau Rd)

Free

Listen to Jennifer Koh, Erica Lai and Genevieve Chua, the three female photographers of the current exhibition Extra Ordinary, talk about their works.

2. Now – 8 July

Me, Myself and All

By Chun Kaifeng

Esplanade Tunnel (1 Esplanade Dr)

10am – 10pm

Free

Chun's first solo exhibition presents an assemblage of objects and large-scale drawings which speak of the need for individuality and freedom along with conflicting desires for security and relationship within the community.

3. Now – 15 July

Picturing Relations: Simryn Gill & Tino Djumini

NX Gallery, NUS Museum (50 Kent Ridge Cres)

Tue – Sat: 10.00am - 7.30pm, Sun: 10.00am - 6.00pm

Free

As a means of story telling, photography enables the framing of selective views of reality and also reveals how a ‘true’ picture of reality may be negotiated. The works of Simryn Gill and Tino Djumini stimulate us to rethink our concepts spaces and domesticity in relation to various aspects such as socio-cultural identities, history and memory. Both artists’ practices have been shaped through the experiences of migration and diaspora.

Do check them out and have a great week ahead!

Regards,

Jennifer.

Artists in Residence = Lisa Kelly is here.

Our Asialink artist in residence, Lisa Kelly is now in Singapore for a good 2 months.

More reporting on this later on.

Meanwhile, Here is the blog where Lisa is a contributor.
http://runartistrun.blogspot.com/

Transmission out. Woon Tien Wei

Have you seen ArtSingapore editorial?

ArtSingapore Editorial by Jennifer Teo

I quote at length...

[...]

Welcome to ArtSingapore. We are now well into 2007 and the Singapore art scene is starting to heat up after the first restful months.

Several incidents earlier this year have reminded us that Singapore and the art scene have still quite a way to go.

First, there was the World Economic Forum report which listed Singapore among the top 10 travel destinations but placed it 42nd (out of 124 territories) in the world in terms of human, cultural and natural resources. This is in spite of the celebrated "more than 6,000 performances and exhibitions last year" and "increase in funding for the arts to $15.5 million a year".

The second is the appeal from focas for financial support from the arts community to help it publish another issue, which will be featured in Documenta 12. focas has been funded by the NAC since its first issue, but in 2003 just before printing the fifth issue, the funding was cut "due to funding re-prioritisation". The issue was published, but since then, focas has been lying dormant. Publishing a journal in Singapore is an economically unviable venture and I am glad that focas has not become defunct, like many other art magazines in Singapore. But I am even gladder that focas has managed to gather the $20,000 it needs and 80% of this is from local sources.

The third incident which I want to mention began with a petition in October last year from the ArtsComm to our state media SPH in relation to inadequate coverage of the arts in The Straits Times. 55 people signed the letter and then a group of about 50 people gathered at The Substation to further discuss the matter and possible lines of action. In February this year, a representative group of the ArtsComm had a meeting with the editorial team of The Straits Times who conceded that they were "committed to cover the arts over and above the readership level".

[...] For entire editorial go to ArtSingapore.org

Wednesday, 20 June 2007

new residency - Feature Bruce Quek

Bruce is a young person who believes that a great many things are funny. As a result (or in spite of) his training in sculpture at LASALLE, his work is centered around investigatory practices and strategic interventions, using any number of media and methods, such as found sound, performance, text and so on. He is also an amateur photographer and occasionally attempts to write.

He is currently serving his national service, which happens to be an excellent way to study bureaucracy.