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Sharing the magic

Pauline Wong
Pauline Wong • 8 min read

Gaurav Kripalani, director of the Singapore International Festival of Arts, on his strategy to make the arts attractive to audiences.

SINGAPORE (May 6): It is an interview arts doyen Gaurav Kripalani has done a hundred times, sitting in the hallowed chambers of Old Parliament House (now turned into The Arts House), in the very chair the late prime minister Lee Kuan Yew once sat. The maroon upholstery is slightly worn, but the bronze nameplate bearing Lee’s name is oddly polished in contrast — as a result of the thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands, of hands that have touched the plate. He laughs good-naturedly when Options insists that he sits on Lee’s chair, which he does obligingly — clearly not the first time he has been asked to do so by a cheeky journalist.

After all, in his 25 years in the arts scene in Singapore, he has probably seen everything there is to be seen and given countless interviews just like this one. Yet, there is no denying the spark in his eyes and the passion in him as he talks about his second year organising the highly acclaimed Singapore International Festival of Arts (SIFA). For a man who knew from a young age that he wanted to live and breathe the arts, familiarity certainly does not breed contempt.

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