(Nov) A Weekend with The Everyday Museum
Traversing worlds

Sat and Sun, 4 and 5 November 2023
Various timings and locations
Free with registration

A Weekend with The Everyday Museum is a series of programmes for you to encounter our ongoing public art commissions as well as the everyday sights, sounds, and uses across the various sites through fresh eyes. 

With each experience conceived as a trail, embark on several artist-led expeditions that will redefine the way we relate to art in everyday spaces around us. Experiment with cyanotype printmaking, engage in spontaneous comic drawing, delve into fictional writing and storytelling, and let the tangential histories and imagined narratives beneath your feet inspire your creative journey.  

Please see full details of each programme below and traverse with us to A Weekend with The Everyday Museum! 

Follow The Everyday Museum’s social media for more information.

Facebook: https://facebook.com/theeverydaymuseum 

Instagram:
@theeverydaymuseum 

Look Up, Slow Down and Pause Here with Marvin Tang

Between trees and a corridor

Join visual artist Marvin Tang in this curated “photo” walk to think about our relationship with the city and nature, through the investigation of the history of greening in Singapore.

Along the walk, participants will be invited to collect materials around them to experiment with cyanotype printing, a camera-less print-making process that use sunlight to “fix” an image onto paper. Playing on the slowness and unpredictability of the cyanotype process, participants actively resist the level of immediacy that we are so used to in the city’s fast-paced environment. Instead, we are forced to practice slowing down in order to truly encounter our surroundings, leaving with an imprint that serves as a documentation of the experience.

Session 1: Between trees 
Sat, 4 Nov 2023, 10–11.30am  
Meet at Block 1 Everton Park (Divaagar’s Everfowl Estate, in front of Ji Xuang Everton Ang Ku Kueh)
Free with registration

This walk will introduce you to the multiple trees planted around the Tanjong Pagar neighbourhood as part of the November Tree Planting Campaign – from the mango sapling at the foot of Everton Park to the chiku tree at Spottiswoode Park. Participants are invited to contemplate the different ways our environment and policies have been shaped by the idea of Singapore as a Garden City. From Singapore’s tree planting campaign – marked by the iconic image of the planting of the mempat tree in 1961, to the emergence of the Supertrees at Gardens by the Bay in 2014, how has the city transformed over the years and influenced our personal relationship with nature?

Session 2: Between a corridor 
Sun, 5 Nov 2023, 10–11.30am 
Meet at 55A Commonwealth Drive
Free with registration

Bookended by Hilmi Johandi’s Stagecraft: Landscaped Grounds and Sookoon Ang’s Moonlight,
participants will traverse the Rail Corridor to examine the history of colonial Singapore and its effects on our environment. From the tree-planting programme in the late 1880s, to understanding the impact of rubber plantations that once covered the Rail Corridor, gain a deeper understanding of the historical transformation of Singapore through the iconic railway line.

Trail Guidelines

  • Both sessions are recommended for ages 13 and above. Participants aged 12 and below must be accompanied by an adult.
  • Please dress comfortably and wear covered walking shoes for this programme.
  • Please bring along a water bottle, raincoat or umbrella in case of rain, and mosquito repellent.
  • This drawing walk will continue in the event of light rain. In the event of bad weather, please look out for updates on Peatix Messenger. You may also contact us through Peatix Messenger or The Everyday Museum’s Instagram, if you have any enquiries on the day of the event.

Disclaimer

  • By attending this session, you consent that Singapore Art Museum and Marvin Tang will not be liable for any injury, loss or damage that you may sustain from your participation.

Ticketing Matters

  • Registration begins 15 minutes before the start of the session. Please arrive early as latecomers may miss the trail.

Photography

  • Please note that there may be photography at the event. By attending, you consent to your photograph being used for future communications both online and offline by SAM for archival, publicity and publications only.

Look Up, Slow Down and Pause Here with V. Chitra

Session 1: Comic Encounters with Art
Sat, 4 Nov 2023, 2–3.30pm
Meet at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark, 39 Keppel Road, Level 3
Free with registration

Art provokes thought. Sometimes, art provokes absurd thoughts!

In this workshop led by environmental anthropologist V. Chitra and student Li Lin, embrace silliness and absurdity as participants engage with art in the everyday. Dive into the playful possibilities of artistic encounters with The Everyday Museum’s latest public art trail Port/raits of Tanjong Pagar: Encounters with Art in the Neighbourhood, and create captivating narratives in the form of comics. Comics is a type of art that is often considered as “non-serious,” but what would happen if we put contemporary art and comics together? This workshop encourages participants to consider this question through their own interaction with the public artworks, guided by creative exercises that will include drawing and storytelling. Get ready to embark on a journey of playful creativity!

Session 2: Wandering with Memory Maps
Sun, 5 Nov 2023, 2–3.30pm
Meet at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark, 39 Keppel Road, Level 3
Free with registration

As we walk through the city, our paths create endless invisible lines. These lines tell us much about the experience of the city and how it has changed through time. They often do not follow the neat lines on a map. When we wander aimlessly, our paths defy plans and repurpose spaces. Inspired by Tan Pin Pin’s latest public artwork walk walk (Singapore Deviation version), which highlights the profound implications on the everyday act of walking, join environmental anthropologist V. Chitra and student Li Lin in this workshop as we retrace the lines we have traversed to tell stories of our city.

Trail Guidelines

  • Both sessions are recommended for ages 13 and above. Participants aged 12 and below must be accompanied by an adult.
  • Please dress comfortably and wear covered walking shoes for this programme.
  • Please bring along a water bottle, raincoat or umbrella in case of rain, and mosquito repellent.
  • This walk will continue regardless of weather condition. You may contact us through Peatix Messenger or The Everyday Museum’s Instagram, if you have any enquiries on the day of the event.

Disclaimer
By attending this session, you consent that Singapore Art Museum and Chitra Venkataramani will not be liable for any injury, loss or damage that you may sustain from your participation.

Ticketing Matters
Registration begins 15 minutes before the start of the session. Please arrive early as latecomers may miss the trail.

Photography
Please note that there may be photography at the event. By attending, you consent to your photograph being used for future communications both online and offline by SAM for archival, publicity and publications only.

others (un)like myself by Ang Kia Yee

A walk and writing workshop in conjunction with our free audio trail series Speaking of which – An Organic Terminus
Sat, 4 Nov, 5–7pm
Meet at Block 4 Tanjong Pagar Plaza, Resident’s Corner (Isabella Teng’s Little Islands)
Free with registration

How do we uncover the stories within buildings, nature, and even ourselves, and share them with respect and lyricism, using the tools of our own heart? 

Join writer and artist Ang Kia Yee on a walk to listen to her fictional piece on Ashkhen Hovakimian (Agnes Joaquim) at Tanjong Pagar, followed by a sharing and writing exercise back at SAM. This relaxed walk-and-write experience takes a leaf from the writer’s process and will guide participants in using empathy, imagination, and research to write their own stories to lend a voice to historical figures, landmarks and other impetus drawn from our everyday sights and sounds. 

Kia Yee’s piece on the origin of Vanda ‘Miss Joaquim’ is part of Speaking of which – An Organic Terminus, a free audio trail series by The Everyday Museum. Participants of this walk-and-write workshop are required to download the app Echoes prior to the session to access the episode. Find out more here.  

Trail Guidelines

  • This session is recommended for ages 13 and above. Participants aged 12 and below must be accompanied by an adult.
  • Please dress comfortably and wear covered walking shoes for this programme.
  • Please bring along your preferred writing materials (laptop, or pen and paper) for this workshop, as well as a water bottle, raincoat, and mosquito repellent.
  • This walk will continue regardless of weather condition. You may contact us through Peatix Messenger or The Everyday Museum’s Instagram, if you have any enquiries on the day of the event.

Disclaimer
By attending this session, you consent that Singapore Art Museum and Ang Kia Yee will not be liable for any injury, loss or damage that you may sustain from your participation.

Ticketing Matters
Registration begins 15 minutes before the start of the session. Please arrive early as latecomers may miss the trail.

Photography
Please note that there may be photography at the event. By attending, you consent to your photograph being used for future communications both online and offline by SAM for archival, publicity and publications only.

Speculative Fictions of the Rail Corridor with Nuraliah Norasid and Nadya Zaheer

A talk and tour in conjunction with our free audio trail series Speaking of which – A Living Blueprint
Sun, 5 No
v, 5–6.30pm 

Meet at SAM at Tanjong Pagar Distripark, 39 Keppel Road, Level 3
Free with registration

Delve into imaginative realms with writer Nuraliah Norasid and actor Nadya Zaheer in this unique and captivating tour experience. As we traverse and listen to Nuraliah’s latest commissioned fictional piece ‘The Railroad Pathfinder’, physically walk out the process and hear from these two collaborators on how to bring speculative fiction to life for an immersive audio trail experience. 

After a short introduction at SAM, participants will be chartered by bus to the Rail Corridor entrance at Spooner Road to explore this iconic railway line’s past lives and significance as a transitory and liminal space. Guided by Nuraliah and Nadya, discover how to carve out rich stories from historical locales with the power of imagination and the art of storytelling.  

‘The Railroad Pathfinder’, written by Nuraliah Norasid and narrated by Nadya Zaheer, is part of Speaking of which – A Living Blueprint, a free audio trail series by The Everyday Museum that will be launched on Sat, 21 October 2023. Participants of this tour are required to download the app Echoes prior to the session to access the episode. Find out more here.  

Trail Guidelines

  • This session is recommended for ages 13 and above. Participants aged 12 and below must be accompanied by an adult.
  • Please dress comfortably and wear covered walking shoes for this programme.
  • Please bring along a water bottle, raincoat, and mosquito repellent.
  • This walk will continue in the event of light rain. In the event of bad weather, please look out for updates on Peatix Messenger. You may also contact us through Peatix Messenger or The Everyday Museum’s Instagram, if you have any enquiries on the day of the event.

Disclaimer
By attending this session, you consent that Singapore Art Museum, Nuraliah Norasid and Nadya Zaheer will not be liable for any injury, loss or damage that you may sustain from your participation.

Ticketing Matters
Registration begins 15 minutes before the start of the session. Please arrive early as latecomers may miss the trail.

Photography
Please note that there may be photography at the event. By attending, you consent to your photograph being used for future communications both online and offline by SAM for archival, publicity and publications only.

About the Artists and Programme Collaborators

Marvin Tang uses images as a tool of investigation. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts at the School of Art, Design and Media (NTU) and Masters in Photography at the University of the Arts London. His research questions the linearity of historical narratives and the notion of collective identities. His works stem from the effects of policy-making to shifting social structures. He is particularly interested in applying this research to Singapore, attempting to investigate its own historical account and relationship to her expanded narratives across the globe.

Marvin is a Producer at Superhero Me, a ground-up inclusive arts movement based in Singapore, and lectures at NAFA and ADM.
https://www.marvintang.co/

 

V. Chitra is an anthropologist and artist whose work often intersects ecology, science and technology studies, and visual studies. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the National University of Singapore. Chitra obtained her Ph.D. from the Department of Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University, after which she was a postdoctoral scholar at the Mittal South Asia institute at Harvard University.

Chitra has a background in design and visual studies. Visual narratives, particularly comics, are fundamental to how she engages in and expresses anthropological research.
https://chitradraws.com/

 

Ang Kia Yee or kyatos is a slow dream machine (慢梦机) striving to build loving and inhabitable worlds. She lives and makes things to demonstrate that other worlds and ways of being are possible, and that we are more than capable of love, regeneration, renewal and healing. Her poetry, short stories, essays and reviews have been published in Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, Mackerel, Stand Magazine, and Cha: An Asian Literary Journal; as well as for exhibitions such as REFUSE (Singapore Art Museum), immaterial bodies (Objectifs) and Networked Bodies (Supernormal). In 2020, she published a book of poems titled slow dream machine.

 

Nuraliah Norasid is a writer and educator with a penchant for research, spreadsheets and understanding how information is organised. She graduated from Nanyang Technological University (NTU) with a Doctor of Philosophy in English and Creative writing (2015). Her novel, The Gatekeeper, won the Epigram Books Fiction Prize in 2016 and the Best Fiction Title for the Singapore Book Awards in 2018. It was also shortlised for the Singapore Literature Prize (2018). In that same year, Nuraliah received the Most Promising Young Women Writer from IndiaSe Magazine.

Her other writings, both fiction and non-fiction, have been published in magazines, journals and anthologies such as Mynah Magazine, Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, and Perempuan: Muslim Women Speak Out.

 

Nadya Zaheer is a singer and actress who graduated with a BA(Hons) Musical Theatre degree from LASALLE College of the Arts.  Her theatre credits include playing the titular role in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Wild Rice), Three Years in the Life and Death of Land (The Necessary Stage), and The Paisen Pieces (The Second Breakfast Company). If she is not performing, Nadya is either creating art with Strawberries Inc. or Play! Collective, or writing her own music to release with Mosta Records. Nadya aspires to spread love, kindness and empathy through her work.

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