In the coming fall, I am interested to find out what makes Singapore my home, besides that my friends and family are here. What are the unique and distinct qualities that cannot be found anywhere else. Despite being here for the past 21 years, ever since my house was demolished, I am still searching for a home.
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Ever since I had to move out of my childhood home because some big corporation bought the land, I keep wondering what is home. With this project, I am trying to examine what makes Singapore so unique. Sometimes I feel like a voyeur peering into this unique country, other times I feel part of this whole craziness. From being in the United States for a year, I realised that a lot of Singaporeans lack the courage to question and think critically. Since young, most of us are being molded to conform to society, to not question authority. We were also taught that too much freedom brings chaos, like workers on strike, protests. However, in most Western countries, we are being seen as a restrictive, totalitarian country. Somehow, the citizens here are happy with status quo and not affected by how things are being run. What make us unique? Is it the Confucius Ideas we were brought up with?
Wednesday, August 11, 2010

This is a sketch for what I plan to do this coming fall. I want to make ceramic houses and form them into an installation. The ceramic houses will be done with red clay and glazed. The black rectangles will be digital frames that contain photos and images.
This project will be a continuation of what I am doing now, combined with other projects I've been working on for the past two year; which is the idea of home.
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
'Once a Jolly Hangman' is about the death penalty in Singapore. What the book aims to do is to provide a factual account on the people who got hanged, and those who unjustly escaped the noose.. But seriously, which system is always fair? Every system somehow or another has it flaws.
What I am really interested about is why is it banned? The government probably does not want outsiders to know the dirty secrets it is hiding. But seriously, the book was out in shops for months before it was being pulled out. Besides, I think the act of banning it combined with suing the author made it even more sensational to the public. Few people actually bothered to buy the book when it first came out, now its highly sought after. Most average Singaporeans read about the statistics provided and feel angry for a while, but after they resume their daily lives as though nothing happened.
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