After the wrap-up of the Singapore Biennale back in February, Singapore Art Museum (SAM)’s latest contemporary art exhibition is Imaginarium: To the Ends of the Earth – and it’s everything that your usual stuffy museum exhibition isn’t.
There are smartphone-controlled drawing robots, ferns nestled within real bombshells, a tiny mushroom-hunting trail for you to go on, and a day-glo floating mountain that’s literally the stuff of dreams! Here are 6 things to look out for at this year’s installment of Imaginarium:
We may not have Peter Pan’s age-defying powers of eternal childhood, but Singaporean Mary Bernadette Lee’s artwork, “Wanderland”, will make you feel like a kid all over again – if only for a while. It’s an immersive installation filled with multicoloured hanging mobiles, textile birds that flap as you tug on them, spinning lanterns that light up, and cascading curtains that chime as you run your fingers through them.
But whimsical vibes aren’t the only thing channelled here. The artist also hopes to bring you back to your experiences with Mother Nature, which is why you’ll see birds in mid-flight, hanging raindrops, and jungle-printed teepee tents all around.
Step into the hand-crafted teepee tents that light up once you enter, infinite times more spacious and stable than the blanket forts I built as a child.
As you explore “Wanderland”, you can’t help but be reminded of how you once experienced the world as a kid: all bright-eyed and filled with wonder.
Looking for Singaporean artist Calvin Pang’s “Where Am I” is like playing a game of real-life “Where’s Wally”. Keep your eyes peeled to spot all 9 clusters of dried white beech mushrooms Calvin has hidden in nooks and crannies all around the museum!
Fun fact: all these are made from real, dried mushrooms!
“Where Am I” is a reminder from the artist to stop and smell the roses, instead of always burying our noses in our phones. And if you’re stumped and can’t find all 9 clusters, here’s a tip: remember to look high and low.
Art isn’t only for the paintbrush-wielding masters – UuDam Tran Nguyen’s “License 2 Draw” invites everyone to have a hand in creating a real-time artpiece.
And even if your idea of drawing = stick figures, don’t fret. You won’t be the one putting ink to paper – in an ingenious marriage of art and technology, UuDam’s artwork comprises a smartphone-controlled drawing robot that’ll do the work for you.
Just download the License 2 Draw app on your phone (iOS | Android), or use one of the iPads provided to maneuver the robot.
Fun fact: anyone around the world can view this artwork in real-time! Just video call “License2Draw” on Skype, and you’ll get to see the entire gallery space and the canvas the robot is drawing on.
it’s time we did our part for the environment and got in touch with that long-forgotten hippie within us again – and getting your hands dirty in SAM’s series of eco-living workshops is one way to start.
From June onwards, there are workshops at the museum where you’ll learn how to make terrariums, a herb rack, and even concoct your own non-toxic au natural cleaning solutions by upcycling fruit and veggie scraps.
Check out the latest schedule of museum programmes here!
Neoprint machines are a rare find in Singapore nowadays, so discovering this vintage photo booth machine in SAM got us all excited. $2 will get you two strips of 4 photos each, minus the kawaii stickers and decorations, but printed out both in colour and B&W versions worthy of the ‘gram.
Switch up the pricey movie date and drop by SAM’s cinema for a unique, FOC alternative instead. Catch SAM’s specially-curated selection of short films and animations, which explore curious stories about distant lands.
In just 44 minutes, you’ll be living life vicariously through a Brazilian girl on a life-changing quest, a homeless Filipino boy who escapes his harsh realities, and an African boy who fantasises into being a snow-covered wonderland.
Be transported to another imaginary world at Thai artist Unchalee Anantawat’s artwork “Floating Mountain”
If you’re averse to crowds, keep 7th and 21st June 2017 free for a real-life Night At The Museum adventure ($12). In an exclusive after-hours tour led by the museum curators themselves, you’ll have free rein of all 4 floors of the museum, sans screaming kids and pesky photobombers.
Create your own miniature version of the magical floating mountain at craft stations!
Instead of spending yet another weekend binge-watching your 182408198th Netflix show, switch things up this time ‘round by taking your entertainment out of the house. You’ll find more than just history lessons and abstract art here – this is one exhibition that promises you new adventures, hands-on experiences, and lots of fun.
Address: SAM at 8Q (Singapore Art Museum’s annexe building), 8 Queen Street, Singapore 188535
Exhibition Dates: 6 May – 27 August 2017
Opening Hours: 10am – 7pm (Mon to Thurs, Sat to Sun), 10am – 9pm (Fri)
Telephone: 6589 9550
This post was brought to you by Singapore Art Museum.
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