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Singaporean creatives forced home rediscover the Lion City’s unique characteristics

  • Significant numbers of Singapore’s artistic diaspora have returned to the city state amid the pandemic and found a new-found appreciation for their home
  • The resulting flowering of artistic output reflects on its rich tropical environment, politics and the effects of the pandemic

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Singaporean painter Alvin Ong is usually based in London but ended up extending his stay in Singapore as the pandemic worsened. During his isolation period, he completed a series of paintings for a solo exhibition at Sydney’s Yavuz Gallery in May. Photo: Alvin Ong

When California-based performance artist and actor Loo Zihan returned home to Singapore in March, he began taking long walks along the Rail Corridor – a stretch of greenery that spans the country’s old railway line. The three-hour, 9.5km (6 mile) hikes through nature were a balm for the social isolation he endured during Singapore’s partial lockdown, when people were only permitted to leave their homes for essential business or exercise.

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“Being a performance-based artist, I was interested in observing how the body adjusts to restrictions of mobility, and how it adapts to being confined within a limited space for long periods of time,” says Loo, who decided to return to Singapore at the urging of friends and family worried about the rapidly worsening spread of Covid-19 in the United States.

His isolation walks inspired him to create a performance project titled Temporary Measures, a series of one-on-one long-distance “processions” along the Rail Corridor accompanied by donors to a fundraiser for migrant workers. During these three-hour walks, run by the Coda Culture art gallery, Loo discussed prearranged subjects with the donor and introduced them to a little-visited, wilder stretch of the Lion City.

“This performance was a way to share with others the underexplored areas of Singapore I discovered during the long walks I took in social isolation,” Loo says.

Singaporean performance artist and actor Loo Zihan. Photo: Samantha Tio
Singaporean performance artist and actor Loo Zihan. Photo: Samantha Tio
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He is not the only overseas-based artist inspired by a return to Singapore, a place affectionately known as the “little red dot”.

Significant numbers of the country’s artistic diaspora, who have over the years taken up residence abroad, have returned to the city state to allay fears of loved ones or to leave countries with surging cases of Covid-19. They include novelist Amanda Lee Koe, author of Delayed Rays of a Star; filmmaker Kirsten Tan, who directed the 2017 drama Pop Aye; handbag designer Ethan Koh; and artist Alvin Teo. This has led to a flowering of artistic output in Singapore as these creatives rediscover its unique characteristics.
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