Love Singapore art? Don’t miss the National Gallery’s first joint exhibition featuring six local artists

Jasmine Alimin
Jasmine Alimin • 10 min read

When Singapore broke away from Malaysia in 1965 to become an independent sovereign state, little thought was given to the impact this had on the local arts scene and its artists. In a first-ever joint exhibition at National Gallery Singapore, which pulls together six very different post-independence artists, we discover how our young nation helped them push the envelope on our modern art scene.

Entitled Something New Must Turn Up: Six Singaporean Artists After 1965, this exhibition, now on till Aug 22, will feature six solo presentations by local art pioneers Chng Seok Tin, Goh Beng Kwan, Jaafar Latiff, Lin Hsin Hsin, Mohammad Din Mohammad, and Eng Tow, each tracing the artist’s practice across decades and disciplines. It promises audiences a rich visual experience with a deeper understanding of how this group of artists actively expanded the boundaries of art in post-independence Singapore through innovative artistic practices and techniques.

It’s interesting to note that the title of this exhibition is derived from an extract by artist Ho Ho Ying, who was one of the leading intellectuals of the Modern Art Society Singapore, proclaiming: “Strictly speaking, Realism has passed its golden age; Impressionism has done its duty; Fauvism and Cubism are declining. Something new must turn up to succeed the unfinished task left by our predecessors”.

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