Posts in 2019 programmes
Haphazard Haptic Happenings: A Tactile Tale for a Hostile City

Hostile architecture, defensive architecture, disciplinary architecture—call it what you want, but public space is never truly designed for every single citizen in mind.

In his penultimate piece for a 6-part series on sensing the city, #GoodReviewCircle writer Alfonse Chiu shares a timely reflection on this concrete jungle that we inhabit: "In a hostile city, who wears the skin that feels the pain, and how do we help?

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Scents and Sensibility: A User’s Guide to Public Smelling 

Remember the Parasite scene where rich man Park Dong-ik commented on how poor man Kim Ki-taek smells like a boiled rag? That's a sensorial observation that immediately defined the social standing of the Kims while revealing the barriers of class mobility that the family faced against the affluent Parks—without ever uttering the word "poor".

What scents in Singapore tell us about who gets to occupy and dominate the olfactory landscape of public space?

#GoodReviewCircle writer Alfonse Chiu recalls an instance when the heavenly smell of curry stirred up some very insidious sentiments amongst our local community. Click on to read more

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Sex and the Circuit Broken City

In the midst of the circuit breaker, Yi-Sheng examines the unravelling of this pandemic: shattering of the queer community; the impact of isolation and distancing on a “culture of desire”. In a strange circling back to digital queer communities of the 90s, Yi-Sheng offers suggestions of cultured company, vigorous self-care, solidarity, and hope, in spaces of community online.

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The Future of Public and Private Space

Confronted by the invasiveness of our current reality (data mining, facial recognition, and the all-around surveillance of our private lives and public spaces), Reena Devi seeks solace (and answers) in contemporary art and questions whether spaces for intimacy can be carved out and protect the sacredness of our privacy amidst the pervasiveness of surveillance technologies?

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Secretive Thing 215 by Lemon & Koko at the M1 Singapore Fringe 2020

In her fifth piece for GRC, Akanksha Raja reviews an entirely immersive and occasionally discombobulating experience, Secretive Thing 215, by role-playing theatre company Lemon & Koko. Like in the game itself, one is transported to a space of simultaneous choice and control, where suspension of belief happens only insofar as the irony of allowing yourself to be manipulated; perhaps a metaphor or just a game, the experience posits how space and environmental experiments can induce behaviours and anxieties…Love is Blind, anyone?

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What makes a place?: Urban Ventures 12 at Keong Saik Road

For her third GRC piece, Akanksha Raja reviews the 12th edition of Urban Ventures, a placemaking initiative by urban design studio LOPELAB, held on Keong Saik Road. In experiencing the artworks at the event in relation to its street, and the undeniable gentrification of these “heritage” neighbourhoods, she asks what becomes of a place, and what it means to “make” it?

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Passion Made Plausible: Hearing the Case of the (Singapore) Busker

In his second GRC piece, Alfonse Chiu deconstructs performativity—of an ostensibly passionate public, and the reality of regulations that corral the humble street performer. Tracing the ethos of street performance alongside the state’s designs on a cultural economy, Alfonse contextures an aural fabric of what is creatively permissible and marketable in this global arts city.

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Making Sense of Our Shifting Reality Through Art and Spirituality 

In her third piece for GRC, Reena Devi plumbs the depths of human existence through a seemingly trendy tendency towards the deeply spiritual, and the sometimes downright shamanistic. Beginning with the hermetic paintings of Hilma Af Klint (and her hugely attended retrospective), as well as other contemporary artists who dabble in mystical practice, Reena broadens this generation’s and its artists’ call to the spiritual, into a contemporary question germane to all.

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Planet Earth is Blue and there’s nothing I can do

In her second piece, GRC writer Akanksha Raja discusses the Singapore Climate Rally—a decidedly non-protest held last month in Hong Lim Park—to address this generation’s approach to the larger, geopolitical conversation on climate crisis, as well as the ambivalent responses from our local public. Positing notions of what advocacy and activism could mean in a place like this, she asks where the public and pragmatic coincide.

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