(Cover-photo credit: The Straits Times Newspaper 8th AUG 2015)
Visual artist: Tan Haur
Happy Birthday Singapore!
Yishun residents are in high spirit presenting this eight stories width façade art to commemorate the Singapore Golden Jubilee. A heart warming community façade art co-created by the residents and myself to celebrate Singapore’s 50th anniversary of independence! I planned it in a form of “Process Art” + "Contemporary POP ART" to be incorporated with mixed media and digital technology, kick start with several workshops to engage the Yishun's residents and students from nearby primary schools in Observational Drawing (sketching with pencil and paper) and developed into Contemporary POP ART creation. I was pleased that they had created interesting pencil line drawings as foundation for the façade art, we move on to digital processing in stage two and later apply traditional paint medium onto the digital printouts.
The entire process was
exiting and engrossing, residents experienced how their key drawing
elements were streamlined into graphical images via smart phone apps.
With the current new media and technologies, I standardized their pencil
mark making styles and strokes, montage and unite the composition with
short listed digital colours and visual tension manipulation. Files were
sent for inkjet output into elongated banner forms right after
vector-conversion and colour management, residents carry on to complete
the final artwork with weather shield pastel color paint for the
backdrop doubled with polka dots.
The collaborative effort makes
all staying in Singapore and Yishun proud; it represents the core value
and belief of our people, living in harmony with nature, different
races and religions. Here, we promote team work spirit, cohesion,
enduring values that we share as Singaporeans, values that undergird the
Singapore Spirit – values that have stood us in good stead in the past
and give us confidence for an even brighter future.
This
artwork is about the stories of Yishun in the northern part of
Singapore. Yishun town has a distinctive historical background, the
unique waterways that had played a major role in the history of human
settlements and developments, pineapple and rubber tree plantation that
boost the economy in the earlier days, and the irreplaceable kampong
spirit that keeps Yishun forever so lively and attractive. I was deeply
touched and inspired by the culture and peoples in this part of
Singapore, a strong feeling to amplify its native habitat as a visual
representation of Yishun town, a pictorial depiction of where it began
and where it is heading.
(Pineapple and Rubber Tree)
Yishun is the Mandarin Romanisation of Nee Soon, named after the
"pineapple king" and rubber magnate, Lim Nee Soon (b. 1879). In the old
days, pineapple and rubber tree plantation was the daily sight of the
residents in Yishun town; it had contributed to the major economy growth
of Singapore.
(Heliconia and Sunbird)
They can be commonly
sighted before Yishun turned into a massive ground of housing estate
development. You are still able to spot Heliconia and Sunbird in Yishun
area by paying more attention in the green zone and rural areas.
Heliconia signifies the blooming life and spirit of Yishun, and the
Sunbird represents freedom, goals and a balance of nature and manmade
environment.
(Peoples and the Waterways)
The elongated
light pastel colours backgrounds symbolize the roles and impacts of
waterways in the past and now. All over the world, waterways play a
major role in the history of human settlements and development. They
provide water, food and a means of livelihood and transport for people
who settle down around them. Likewise, the waterways here served the
same purposes. In the past, these rivers were populated by river nomads
known as Orang Seletar. They travelled along these waterways and the
Straits of Johor, depending on the rivers for food and transport.
The first Chinese settlers here most probably arrived via these
waterways. In the early 1800s, Chinese settlements formed at the foot of
the rivers, most notably Seletar River. Plantations were established
around these settlements. During the early days, before roads were built
there, the planters would transport their produce to warehouses in town
by boat down the waterways and along the eastern coast to Singapore
River. While these waterways no longer serve as a means of transport and
food now, they continue to play an important role in our lives. Seletar
River, dammed to form Upper and Lower Seletar Reservoirs, is an
important source of water for Singaporeans today.
The free
flowing colored polka dots in the background symbolize our citizens and
the aspiration of peoples from different races, backgrounds and
religions. We are one and move as one; One People, One Nation, and One
Singapore. Majulah Singapura!
~ Artist Tan Haur