Residencies OPEN

Residencies OPEN

WHEN
22 – 23 January 2021
VENUE
Block 37 & 38 Malan Road (go to Google maps)
OPENING HOURS
22 January 2021, 3 – 9pm
23 January 2021, 2 – 7pm
ADMISSION
Free Admission
WEBSITE
http://ntu.ccasingapore.org/events/residencies-open/

Residencies OPEN

Residencies OPEN offers a rare insight into the artist’s studio. Through discussions, performances, installations, and presentations of works-in-progress, Residencies OPEN showcases the diversity of contemporary art practice from around the globe and the divergent ways artists conceive an artwork with the studio as a constant space for experimentation and research.

Featuring Artists-in-Residence:
Kin Chui (Singapore)
ila (Singapore)
Sim Chi Yin (Singapore/United Kingdom)
Marvin Tang (Singapore)
Boedi Widjaja (Indonesia/Singapore)
Green Zeng (Singapore)

Also joining Residencies OPEN is Beatrice Glow (United States) thanks to a new partnership between NTU CCA Singapore and the Yale-NUS College Artist-in-Residence Programme.

Studio of Fyerool Darma, Residencies OPEN, 17 & 18 January 2020. Image courtesy of NTU CCA Singapore.

NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore, Block 43 Malan Road
17 October 2020 – 28 February 2021
Trinh T. Minh-ha. Films. is the first institutional exhibition of filmmaker, music composer, writer, anthropologist, feminist and postcolonial theorist Trinh T. Minh-ha in Asia, presented in an exhibition space.
Exhibitions
Gillman Barracks, outdoor locations
22 – 30 January 2021
​​​​​​​Five artists and collectives - Tell Your Children, Machineast, SuperCyberTown, ClogTwo and UFHO – each create a fictional endangered critter that lives across five different habitats in the district of Gillman Barracks.
Block 37 Malan Road
22 – 23 January 2021
Artist Beatrice Glow will be sharing textile and video works as well as her work-in-progress projects including Empire of Smoke, Mannahatta VR and Rhunhattan: A Tale of Two Islands.
Exhibitions
Gillman Barracks, 6 Lock Road, #02-09
22 – 28 January 2021
What happens in the hours after a city falls asleep, after an apocalypse? Artists working in five timezones around the world explore the cosmic and mundane in the wake of breakdowns and slippages from “normalcy”, centred on a night-time gallery experience at Gillman Barracks.