Posts tagged Articles
Love Does Not Make Good Theatre (or: Things that I Know Now that Nobody Told Me, and I Found Out the Hard Way, so You Don’t Have To)

It really doesn’t matter how smart or talented you are. If you can’t be on time, won’t learn your lines, are mean to the crew, and are self-centred, believe me, it shows in your work. I’ve had to speak to 2 different young actresses about their behaviour – one made an effort to change, the other hasn’t had work in theatre since. Not because of me, I don’t have that kind of clout, but simply because she had the personality of a cockroach.

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Archiving with Whimsy

The word ‘archive’ is not one that people would usually connotate with fun. Perhaps the first association that might come to mind are the various functions to archive posts and messages on Instagram and Whatsapp. Material that people feel are no longer relevant to them now and best deemed as a relic of the past. A more traditional association might be the idea of the archive as a musty collection locked in a basement somewhere, perhaps something like the Vatican Secret Archive. In both cases, the archive is a place with limited access to artefacts that are not really particularly relevant to our day and age.

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unruly bodies do not frighten me anymore

In 2018, ila and Sonia Kwek embarked on a spontaneous collaboration for an open call by Rebel Daughters in 2018, as part of International Women’s Day with the aim of “filling up the public sphere, physical and virtual, with works of art done by female creatives from or based in the region”. Using red thread as a departure point, a metaphor for predestined connections for kindred spirits to find each other through different lifetimes. Over the years, both ila and Sonia have collaborated in three different iterations of this project, examining the politics of the body in society. Through email exchanges, they ruminate their experiences in working collaboratively and the kinship that has blossomed and grown over the years.

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Running Thread: On Embroidery and Poetry

When I picked up embroidery seriously in February of 2021, it wasn’t with the direct intention of tying it to my poetry practice. I just needed to get away from people and their thoughts on my devices. Every time my phone buzzed, I felt a deep anxiety. I had to find a way to keep my hands occupied, and not pick up calls or type replies I might regret.

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The Fear of Minding Monsters

Monsters have a deep rooted tradition within horror as harbingers of unspeakable terror. Feasting upon the very darkness that fuels the anxiety of unknowns, they are the perfect embodiment of the writer’s fear—presenting themselves as the elusive “unmentionables” set on taking over the mind.

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Days Upon Days

There was a tweet that went viral in April, around the time most countries began implementing nationwide lockdowns, movement restrictions and urging people to stay at home. It was understandable why the tweet resonated with people – or perhaps, struck a nerve.

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The Zoom Boom

As we wade deeper into Phase 2, more events pop up in my periphery, like satellites blinking just out of reach. Whenever I click on these links, I’m awed by how well-produced they are. The care that event organisers pour into the digital realm cannot be understated. Accessibility, engagement, community: these are all themes I see appear over and over. And with great reason!

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Somewhere to Gather, Somewhere to Dream: 4 Stories of Lost Art Spaces in Singapore

It is 11PM on a Sunday night and I am getting a haircut in an industrial warehouse in Geylang. My friend Gwen runs a part time barber shop in this studio space which they share with their partner. There is something about getting your hair cut by a fellow queer person that makes it a hundred times less stressful: a kind of mutual understanding. There is also something about being in a space run by someone from your community that makes it feel like freedom.

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