Showing posts with label Little India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little India. Show all posts

Gather for a Village-Themed Celebration at the Indian Heritage Centre’s Pongal Open House 2026

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Hi Huneybees,

The Indian Heritage Centre (IHC) ushers in the new year with its much-anticipated Pongal Open House 2026, held across two festive weekends on 10, 11, 17 and 18 January 2026. This year’s edition welcomes you into a village-themed celebration that captures the heart of Pongal — a time of gratitude, harvest and the enduring strength of community.

Pongal 2026 itself is celebrated from 13 to 17 January, traditionally beginning on the last day of the ninth month in the Tamil calendar. Observed over four days, Pongal is a harvest festival celebrated by the Tamil Hindu community to express gratitude to the Sun God, Surya, for a successful harvest and to welcome a bountiful new season. 

It is also a time when cattle — especially the cow, which is considered sacred in Hindu belief — are honoured for their role in agriculture and daily life. Beyond its agricultural roots, Pongal is marked by temple offerings, lively social gatherings and new beginnings, as families don new clothes and carry out spring cleaning in their homes.

While we may be far removed from traditional harvest seasons in an urban city like Singapore, the Pongal Open House offers a meaningful opportunity to reconnect with these values. It is a chance to introduce children — and remind ourselves — of the importance of respecting nature and animals, while setting intentions for a fresh and hopeful start to the year.

Rooted in the warmth of rural life, the Open House brings together cultural performances, traditional crafts, hands-on workshops and a vibrant festive market, creating a welcoming space where generations and communities gather to celebrate the harvest season together.


Celebrating Community at the Heart of Pongal

Community takes centre stage at Pongal Open House 2026 through two meaningful initiatives that honour collective participation and shared traditions.

One of the highlights is the creation of the largest kolam made with harvest crops, an ambitious and symbolic artwork led by Mdm Vijaya Mohan. Created in collaboration with volunteers from Singapore’s migrant and domestic worker communities, this kolam will be showcased on 18 January 2026 from 11am to 1pm at the Indian Heritage Centre façade, and will be submitted to the Kolam Book of Records. Admission is free, and visitors are invited to witness this powerful expression of unity and tradition.

Running throughout the Open House period from 10 to 18 January 2026, the Centre will also present a community art installation created in collaboration with SunLove Active Ageing Centre, Serangoon. Displayed along the Level 1 Lobby Staircase, the installation features 30 hand-painted Pongal pots, lovingly crafted by seniors from the centre. Open daily from 10am to 5pm, the installation celebrates creativity, memory, and the passing down of cultural heritage across generations.


Experiencing Pongal Through Craft, Performance and Cuisine

Beyond its community showcases, Pongal Open House 2026 offers visitors an immersive journey into Pongal traditions through live demonstrations and performances.

Across all four event days, the Indian Heritage Centre façade will come alive with free live cultural performances from 11am to 4pm, featuring folk dances and dramatised storytelling inspired by village life. On 18 January, performances will begin from 2pm, inviting visitors to soak in the festive atmosphere alongside the community.

Visitors can also witness the artistry of traditional pottery through a live pottery demonstration by master potter Shri V.K. Munusamy from Villianur, India. Held on 10 and 11 January at the Level 1 Lobby from 10am to 5pm, the demonstration showcases the crafting of miniature Pongal pots.
*Selected visitors may even bring home one of these handcrafted keepsakes.

Adding flavour to the festivities, the live Pongal cooking demonstration takes place on 10 and 11 January from 2pm to 3pm at the Centre’s façade. Watch traditional Pongal come together live as chefs share the stories and significance behind this beloved harvest dish.


Hands-On Workshops and Guided Experiences

For those keen to explore deeper, a curated selection of workshops and guided programmes offers opportunities to learn, create and experience Pongal traditions firsthand.
*Registration is required via https://ihc-programmes.peatix.com.

The Pulli Kolam Workshop, held on 10 January from 10.30am to 12.30pm, introduces participants to this classical South Indian art form in a beginner-friendly setting. Conducted at the Indian Heritage Centre Office Seminar Room, the workshop is priced at $10 per participant.

On 11 January, the Tanjore Art Workshop invites participants to create their own Pongal-themed artwork using rich colours, gold foils and inlaid glass gems. This session runs from 10.30am to 12.30pm and is priced at $25 per participant.

Families can also join the Village Trail & Banana Leaf Pongal Meal on 10 January, a guided experience around Little India that explores how village customs live on in modern Singapore. The trail concludes with a village-inspired banana leaf lunch and runs from 10.30am to 12.30pm, priced at $30 per person.

For younger audiences, Mongal Pongal – Interactive Children Storytelling offers a playful and engaging session combining storytelling, craft-making and music. Conducted in Tamil and English, the programme takes place on 10 January from 11am to 12.30pm at the Level 2 Activity Room, priced at $20 per parent-child pair, and is suitable for children aged 4 to 12.


Free Family-Friendly Activities Throughout the Open House

Throughout the Open House weekends, visitors of all ages can enjoy a wide range of free activities designed for relaxed exploration and creative play.

Drop-in craft activities are available at the Level 2 Special Exhibition Gallery from 10am to 5pm on selected dates. These include decorating a DIY cattle toy inspired by Indian folk designs on 10 and 11 January, painting a Pongal pot pin on 17 and 18 January, and creating a personalised Pongal charm keychain across all four event days. Pongal-themed colouring sheets are also available, with completed artworks displayed on the Colouring Wall of Fame.

Young visitors can pick up the Pongal Special: Kids Activity Booklet from the Visitor Staff Counter at the Level 1 Lobby between 10 and 18 January, offering fun activities and easy-to-understand facts that introduce the festival’s meaning and traditions.

Additional lobby activities run across all four days, featuring interactive panels, games and festive booths that share bite-sized Pongal facts in an engaging way.


Festive Treats, Market Finds and More

A visit to Pongal Open House 2026 wouldn’t be complete without food and festive shopping. Complimentary Pongal snacks and beverages will be available at the Level 1 Lobby at 11am and 3pm on all four event days.

On 10 and 11 January, the Pongal Festive Market opens at the Level 2 Special Exhibition Gallery from 10am to 5pm, offering a curated selection of unique finds while supporting local Indian home-based businesses.


A Warm Invitation to Celebrate Together

With its village-inspired setting, strong community focus and a wide range of free and paid programmes, Pongal Open House 2026 at the Indian Heritage Centre offers a meaningful and welcoming way to celebrate the harvest season.

If you’re in the area for the festivities, it’s also worth spending time around Little India. From 13 to 17 January 2026, the neighbourhood comes alive with even more colour and energy for the Pongal Festival, featuring dazzling light displays at the Little India Pongal Light-up and the rare opportunity to see live cattle adorned with flowers at the Pongal Cattle Farm along Clive Street.

Whether you’re there for the performances, workshops, food, or simply to soak in the festive atmosphere, this annual celebration invites you to gather, give thanks and begin the year together in the spirit of community and renewal.


To learn more about the traditions of Pongal, visit https://www.roots.gov.sg/ich-landing/ich/pongal.
For more information, visit http://indianheritage.org.sg or IHC’s Facebook and Instagram page.

About the Pongal Open House 2026
Dates: 10, 11, 17 & 18 January 2026 (weekends only)
Time: 10am - 6pm
Venue: Indian Heritage Centre
Admission fees: Free








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Exciting New Artworks You Should Check Out @ ARTWALK Little India 2019

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Hi Huneybees,


In its fifth edition, ARTWALK Little India, an annual multi-disciplinary public art project set in Singapore’s iconic Little India precinct, returns with this year’s theme of Image and Sound of Fragrance.

Take a walk on the streets of Little India and rediscover the vicinity through multisensorial artworks as the walls of Little India gets washed with new bright colours, giving it the vibrancy with the celebration of the arts.  


From 18 January to 2 February (the longest run of the festival to date), there will be performances by Kathak guru Jyotika Joshi, an exhibition by various artists at UltraSuperNew Gallery, dance performances by Kathak guru Jyotika Joshi, theatrical storytelling by Kamini Ramachandran and mural paintings and artworks by students of LASALLE this year to bring to life the rich sights, smells and sounds of the community. 

Many of the performances and workshops are free, and the popular guided tours by Monster Day Tours are nearly fully booked! Huney'Z World did a preview of the festival highlights and here's a little highlight to help you plan what your route around Little India... 



1. In the Clouds (Park 22 Hotel – 60 Kerbau Road, Singapore 219184)

Take Exit E from Little India MRT Station, and turn two rights into Kerbau Road, where many colourful shophouses lie. At the back of the black-and-white colonial-style Park 22 Hotel is this sprawling, similarly monochromatic mural. Created by an individual local artist who goes by the name “Speak Cryptic,” “In the Clouds” intertwines flowers often used in Indian garlands with the patterns commonly found on sarees, making an intricately beautiful forest out of the Indian women’s traditional outfit. 



2. A Scent of Lights (20 Clive Street, Singapore 209778)

Located near the Indian Heritage Centre is a towering mural that beautifully captures the burst of life that is Little India. Can you smell the flowers, the spices, and the incense, still burning in little flames? Can you hear the gold bangles clinking? 



3. Tracing the Line (POLI Site, Clive Street)

You can find “Tracing the Line” placed just beside the mural from 2017 of a young woman in a dupatta scarf. Step into this cart-like work and take a look around. Archival photographs from the early years of Little India are repurposed into new images detailing the history of migration and labour in the community. There will also be performances happening and interacting with the art – dancers from LASALLE will put on interpretative pieces to embody the stories told by the artwork.



4. Little India Sound Sculptures (UltraSuperNew Gallery – 107 Rowell Road, Singapore 208031)

End your walking tour on a high note by visiting UltraSuperNew Gallery, a recently opened art gallery space with a bar and restaurant. For the festival, it’s hosting a special exhibition of artworks again integrating all the vibrant sensory experiences of Little India. Right at the door, you’ll be greeted by this majestic sculpture piece by award-winning artist Dipali Gupta. Through 3D modelling, printing and heat moulding, she captures the shapeless memories and cacophonies of Little India in unique waves and slopes. 



5. Traditional Trades of Little India (Belilios Lane)

Head over to busy Belilios Lane and it’s hard to miss this very large piece by Psyfool called Traditional Trades of Little India which features various Indian tradesmen that can be found in this area. There is the parrot astrologer who uses a parrot to pick fortunes, a garland maker who makes these fragrant flower chains, Kacang Puteh man who sells the street snacks, and of course the dhobis – washermen and women for which the Dhoby Ghaut area was named for!



6. I Am Still Here by Dyn (5 Clive Street)


ARTWALK Little India 2019 runs from 18 January – 2 February 2019, with programmes and activities happening on Fridays and Saturdays, 6:00pm – 9:30pm. Details can be found on http://artwalklittleindia.sg, where a digital version of the festival guide is also available for download. Members of the public can pick up a copy of the festival guide at the Indian Heritage Centre or Sate Kelinci Pak (event main ground).
Guided Tours by Monster Day Tours: Sign up at https://artwalklittleindia2019.peatix.com/
Self-guided tours: Available through the Locomole app on mobile devices, on both the App Store and Google Play store.



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Tour The Exotic Side Of Singapore With ARTWALK Little India

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Hi Huneybees,


Being the Singapore Arts Week (SAW), there are infinite art programmes happening around Singapore. One that I fell in love with is the popular multi-disciplinary arts festival ARTWALK Little India. The area is always the 24 hours mall - Mustafa Centre for me and the roti prata stalls in the nearby area, it was really nice to fully immerse myself in this cultural part of Singapore and experience what else is there in the vicinity.

A Sailor’s Guide to Little India by A’shua ImranPaying tribute to the rich Indian culture in Little India as well as other cultures that harmoniously share this space, A’shua Imran envisions our ancestors’ voyage to Singapore. Using a selection of scenes, cultural landmarks and historical buildings to illustrate an imagined map, each segment in the mural reveals different encounters of a wanderer – and yet, points to their histories and identities.

Jointly organised by LASALLE College of the Arts (LASALLE) and Singapore Tourism Board (STB), with the support of Little India Shopkeepers and Heritage AssociationARTWALK Little India is already in its fourth edition this year, returning with the theme Urban Mythologynumerous artists return to resurrect long-lost tales of Little India.

ARTWALK is managed by a team of seven BA(Hons) Arts Management students from LASALLE, with guidance from renowned artist and LASALLE Senior Fellow, Milenko Prvacki. In total, there are seven new murals, one visual art installation, and three performing artists at ARTWALK 2018, in addition to fringe activities.


With the growing numbers of rental bicycles, I would suggest a cycle around the area, so that you can cover the different spots shown on the map. You can take the chance to explore the area and maybe spot some quaint spots or new places to dine in...




With an extended programme across 10 days, and the addition of new hands-on activities such as Dress-a-Puppet workshops and Aura Photography readings, visitors can expect an immersive experience like no other.


Master storyteller Kamini Ramachandran, a long-time participant since 2016, sets the tone by telling stories of the supernatural variety. These stories will be interspersed with selected poems by local poet Elancharan Gunasekaran.


Eunice Lim, artist of the well-received ARTWALK Little India murals Cattleland and Cattleland 2, is also back to honour Singapore’s longest-running Tamil bookstore, the Siyamala Bookstore, which imports publications directly from India. 



Leow Wei Li, a student volunteer on Eunice’s mural in 2017, decided to take part in this year’s ARTWALK after her enjoyable experience last year. Wei Li joins up with Dominic Khoo to form art duo, sobandwine, and their mural is an homage to the marigold flower in Indian culture.



Other than artworks, you can also find interactive installations like this one titled Mirrors by Tinu Verghis. Bringing to light the social gesture of whispering and augmenting the process of how secrets are communicated, Verghis’ interactive installation is a reflection of a society that is multicultural, multiracial, multi-religious and multi-lingual – both literally and metaphorically. Embellished with tiny traditionally embroidered Indian mirrors and measuring at an approximate 5m in length and 1.5m in height, the pipe installation seeks to engage visitors to reflect on their individual identities, cultures and respective histories. Go ahead and share your little secrets and tips.

Beyond the kinship that many participating artists and students have developed with the community at Little India through successive installments of ARTWALK, the project has, over time, generated greater awareness of the rich heritage of the cultural precinct. From a visitorship of 74,000 to 2015’s inaugural edition of ARTWALK, the festival has grown by leaps and bounds, attracting 140,000 visitors to Little India for the 2017 edition. ARTWALK Little India 2018 marks the first of a renewed three-year partnership between STB and LASALLE, following a successful first three years between 2015 and 2017.

To further draw out the collaborative nature of the festival, business owners within Little India were invited to play an even more engaged role in ARTWALK 2018. For the first time, corporate sponsors who have businesses within the area jumped on board the project. These include main sponsor Corwin Holding Pte Ltd (joint venture between Lum Chang Holdings and a fund managed by LaSalle Investment Management Asia), developer of the new mixed development project at former The Verge, and co-sponsors Nippon Paint and Wanderlust Hotel. Four organisations also came on board as programme partners, with special programmes created for ARTWALK Little India: Monster Day Tours, Indian Heritage Centre, Artgrain, and Audace Bar & Restaurant.
Layers by Shah RizzalShah Rizzal believes in the necessity for preserving the architecture of a space that outlasts the need for progressive urban redevelopment. He seeks to convey this message by bringing our attention to the shophouses in Little India and highlighting the contribution of brick makers that once resided in that district, both of which are an invaluable fragment of history within the precinct.
ARTWALK Little India 2018 runs from 18 – 27 January 2018, with programmes and activities happening on Thursdays to Saturdays, 6pm – 9pm. There are so much more to explore and get discovered. So bring your friends along for an Instagram photography session!

Festival by Izzad Radzali ShahThrough his engagement with residents of Little India, see how he transcribes oral-aural storytelling into visuals and symbols in this comical blue piece.

Details of all artists, artworks, performances, activities and promotions can be found on http://artwalklittleindia.sg/, with a digital version of the festival guides available for download. Members of the public can pick up a copy of the festival guide at the Indian Heritage Centre or Clive Street POLI site.
Guided Tours by Monster Day Tours: Sign up at https://artwalklittleindia2018.peatix.com/
Self-guided tours: Available through the Locomole app on mobile devices, on both the App Store and Google Play store.




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