Showing posts with label Singapore Art Week 2026. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singapore Art Week 2026. Show all posts

Singaporean Couples Celebrate Love and Commitment in Knots of Time

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Hi Huneybees,

As the new year begins, Knots of Time: Marriage Then and Now invites you to slow down and reflect on one of life’s most enduring commitments - marriage. Presented in conjunction with Singapore Art Week, this intimate photography exhibition brings together the stories of 41 Singaporean couples, captured through the lens of veteran photographer Leong Ka Tai and curated by Gwen Lee.

Spanning two years of documentation, the exhibition presents portraits of both public figures and everyday Singaporeans, revealing the unseen threads that bind two lives together over time. Hawkers, nurses, athletes, politicians, and long-married couples from all walks of life stand side by side, reminding you that love, in its many forms, is a shared human experience.

At the heart of Knots of Time is a simple yet powerful gesture. Each couple is photographed holding their original wedding photograph or a cherished wedding memento, anchoring their present-day selves to a moment of promise made years or sometimes decades ago. Together, these portraits trace how love persists even as time reshapes faces, bodies, and circumstances.

The exhibition officially opens on 15 January 2026 at the National Library Building (Level 1 Plaza). Guests of Honour include participating couple Sylvia Lim, Chairwoman of the Workers’ Party, and Quah Kim Song, former national football star, alongside other couples featured in the exhibition.


An Enduring Commitment in an Ever-Changing City

Singapore is a city defined by constant transformation. Over the past 60 years, neighbourhoods have evolved, skylines have shifted, and familiar landmarks have made way for the new. Against this backdrop of rapid change, marriage stands as a steady, enduring commitment - one that offers continuity through life’s many seasons.

Through Knots of Time, Leong Ka Tai places these deeply personal relationships within a broader national narrative. By pairing present-day portraits with wedding images from the past, the exhibition highlights how traditions from earlier generations coexist with contemporary realities. It is a quiet yet powerful reflection on how private commitments endure amid social, cultural, and urban change.


Across Cultures, Generations, and Circumstance

The project builds upon Leong’s earlier work for the Setouchi Triennale in Japan (2019), where he photographed elderly islanders holding their wedding photographs with some widowed, bearing visible traces of time, loss, and memory.

Returning to Singapore after years working abroad, Leong found renewed inspiration in the country’s diversity of cultures, faiths, and lived experiences. Knots of Time reflects this richness, featuring couples whose relationships cross race, religion, and social expectations.

One particularly moving story is that of Elizabeth and former national sprinter C. Kunalan, who fell in love during a time when interracial relationships were widely frowned upon.

“Objection from my father. So he said, ‘You better break up with this Indian boy or you have to leave home.’ So of course, I had to leave home,” Elizabeth recalls.

Now married for more than 60 years, their story speaks to quiet resilience as love sustained across race, culture, and circumstance. It is one of many narratives within the exhibition that reveal how commitment, patience, and shared history shape a marriage over time.


Sharing Stories of Commitment

In keeping with the exhibition’s themes, a digital Instagram competition will run throughout the exhibition period. You’re invited to share a photograph and personal memory that reflects your own relationship journey. Selected participants stand a chance to win an INSTAX instant camera, with behind-the-scenes content and updates shared via @knots.of.time on Instagram.


About Leong Ka Tai

Leong Ka Tai has been a professional photographer for over 40 years, with works exhibited across Hong Kong, Europe, the USA, and Southeast Asia. His photographs have appeared in 22 books and numerous publications, including National Geographic, GEO, Stern, Life, The New York Times, The Sunday Telegraph, and Paris Match.

Naturalised as a Singapore citizen in 1995, Leong lives and works in Singapore today. Growing up in a city where English and Chinese cultures intersect, he continues to explore themes of culture, identity, and race — a familiar yet ever-evolving subject in his work.

Knots of Time: Marriage Then and Now runs until 1 February 2026, encapsulating two years of patient observation, trust, and storytelling — and offering a tender reminder that while time changes everything, love, when nurtured, endures.


Knots of Time: Marriage Then and Now

By Leong Ka Tai 

Presented by DECK Photography Art Centre Ltd

Part of Singapore Art Week 2026


๐Ÿ“  National Library Building, L1 Plaza, 100 Victoria St, S188064
๐Ÿ“… 15 January 2026 - 1 February 2026

⏰ Mon - Sun, 10am - 9pm 

๐ŸŽซ Free Admission


More information can be found on the exhibition website: https://www.artweek.sg/event-detail/knots-of-time-marriage-then-and-now and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/knots.of.time/  



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Singapore Art Museum at Singapore Art Week 2026: Sonic Shaman, Singapore Biennale and Citywide Art Programmes

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Hi Huneybees,

Singapore Art Week 2026 returns at Singapore Art Museum (SAM) with an expanded programme of exhibitions, performances and public art initiatives that activate both the museum and the city. Spanning sound, performance, contemporary art and research-driven practices, SAM’s 2026 offerings bring together local and international artists across multiple sites, positioning listening, material inquiry and collective experience at the centre of this year’s edition.


Sonic Shaman 2024.
Image courtesy of TheCube Project Space.

Sonic Shaman 2026: Borderless — Singapore Debut

A key highlight of the first weekend of Singapore Art Week is the Singapore debut of Sonic Shaman 2026: Borderless, a large-scale international sound festival presented in collaboration with TheCube Project Space (Taipei). The festival brings together more than 20 artists, musicians and thinkers working across experimental sound, performance and contemporary art.

Drawing on Southeast Asia’s diverse sonic traditions and vernacular musical histories, Sonic Shaman foregrounds emerging experimental practices while creating a shared platform for cross-cultural exchange. Live performances, sound works and oral presentations unfold across the festival, inviting audiences to engage with sound as both artistic practice and collective experience.

Cheryl Ong, Louis Quek, DuckUnit and Yuen Chee Wai.
Images courtesy of the artists

Co-curated by Singapore Art Museum and TheCube Project Space, Sonic Shaman 2026: Borderless is presented as part of Singapore Art Week and features commissions from Singapore Biennale 2025: pure intention. This edition is jointly initiated by the National Arts Council, Singapore Art Museum and Mapletree Investments, with support from the Singapore Tourism Board.


‘Memory Market’ as part of SAW at SAM.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

Memory Market

Developed alongside Sonic Shaman 2026: Borderless, the Memory Market extends the festival’s focus beyond sound into other sensory registers. Through creative booths, workshops and culinary collaborations by Singapore-based creatives and designers, the programme engages taste, scent and touch as pathways to memory, encounter and collective participation.


(Left) Elia Nurvista, Long Hanging Fruits, 2024.
Image courtesy of Mikael Lundgren. 
(Right) Bagus Pandega. Detail of L.O.O.P. (Loss Overgrown Organic Pulse), 2025. 
Image courtesy of Philipp Hรคnger and Kunsthalle

Material Intelligence Series: Nafasan Bumi ~ An Endless Harvest

Ahead of Singapore Art Week, SAM opens Elia Nurvista and Bagus Pandega: Nafasan Bumi ~ An Endless Harvest, the third presentation in the museum’s Material Intelligence series. The exhibition features kinetic, multimedia and sculptural works that examine Indonesia’s extractive economies and the material flows associated with plantations, mining and emerging electric futures.

Through their practices, the artists trace the intersections of resource extraction, colonial legacies and the climate crisis, situating material inquiry within broader environmental and socio-political contexts.


Momentary Pulses: Art in the Central Business District.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

Momentary Pulses: Art in the Central Business District

Beyond the museum, SAM launches Momentary Pulses: Art in the Central Business District, a new two-year public art trail under The Everyday Museum initiative. Featuring newly commissioned, site-specific works by local artists, the trail unfolds across building facades, passageways and pedestrian routes within Singapore’s CBD.

Responding to the rhythms, sounds and logics of the commercial district, these works introduce moments of listening, reflection and engagement within everyday urban movement.


Singapore Biennale 2025 Curator Tour, Tanjong Pagar Distripark.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

Singapore Biennale 2025: pure intention — Citywide Activation

During Singapore Art Week, visitors can also experience Singapore Biennale 2025: pure intention, which continues across multiple citywide venues, including SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark. Featuring over 100 artworks and 30 new commissions by more than 80 artists, the Biennale presents contemporary art across heritage sites, commercial spaces and neighbourhood environments.

Singapore Sign Language (SgSL) Tour of Singapore Biennale 2025 (Tanglin Halt).
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

An expanded programme of tours, including curator-led walkthroughs, Singapore Sign Language tours and special bus tours, further activates the Biennale during SAW, offering additional entry points into its themes and sites.


Exhibition view of ‘Talking Objects’ at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

Collection Exhibitions at SAM

Within SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark, exhibitions such as Talking Objects and The Living Room present works from the museum’s collection alongside international loans.

Talking Objects explores the emotional and experiential dimensions of everyday objects, examining how ordinary materials carry layered histories and memories. Running in parallel, The Living Room reflects on the afterlives of performance through participatory works, archival materials and ephemeral gestures.

Exhibition view of ‘The Living Room’ at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

These exhibitions are supported by artist talks, performances, workshops and drop-in activities throughout Singapore Art Week.


Exhibition view of the Learning Gallery at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

Learning and Research Programmes

SAM’s broader programme includes the Learning Gallery, which invites younger audiences and families to engage with contemporary art through experimentation and material exploration across themes of identity, home, nature, memory and place.

Exhibition view of the Learning Gallery at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark.
Image courtesy of Singapore Art Museum

In Conversation with SAM Residencies presents a multi-modal overview of the research-driven practices of artists, curators and creative practitioners in residence, offering insights into ongoing artistic processes and collaborative methodologies.


Subodh Gupta.
Image courtesy of Le Bon Marche

Public Access During Singapore Art Week

With free admission to all exhibitions and Singapore Biennale 2025: pure intention presentations from 22 to 31 January 2026, SAM’s Singapore Art Week programme offers wide public access to a diverse range of contemporary art experiences across the museum and the city.

More information on Singapore Art Museum’s Singapore Art Week 2026 programmes is available on the museum’s official website.

Singapore Art Week ๐Ÿ“ SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark and various locations in Singapore ๐Ÿ“… 22 to 31 January 2026 ⏰ 10am to 7pm Extended Hours: 10am to 9pm on 23, 24, 30 and 31 January 2026 ๐ŸŽซFree throughout SAW 2026




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