National Arts Council, Singapore

Last updated
National Arts Council
Nac eng logo.png
Agency overview
Formed15 October 1991;31 years ago (1991-10-15)
Preceding agencies
  • Singapore Cultural Foundation
  • Cultural Division of Ministry of Community Development
  • Festival of Arts Secretariat
  • National Theatre Trust
Jurisdiction Government of Singapore
Headquarters90 Goodman Road, Goodman Arts Centre, Blk A #01-01, Singapore 439053
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • Goh Swee Chen, Chairman
  • Rosa Daniel, CEO
  • Paul Tan, Deputy CEO (Planning & Corporate Development)
  • Low Eng Teong, Deputy CEO (Sector Development)
Parent Ministry Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth
Website www.nac.gov.sg
Entrance of Goodman Arts Centre, where the National Arts Council is housed. Entrance of Goodman Arts Centre, Singapore.jpg
Entrance of Goodman Arts Centre, where the National Arts Council is housed.

The National Arts Council (NAC) is a statutory board established on 15 October 1991 to oversee the development of arts in Singapore. It is under the purview of the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth. The NAC provides grants, scholarships, awards and platforms for arts practitioners, as well as arts education and programmes for the general public.

Contents

History

In 1989, the Advisory Council on Culture and the Arts, chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Ong Teng Cheong, produced a report assessing the status of various aspects of arts in Singapore. The report would form the blueprint for cultural policy in Singapore, and led to the establishment of the National Arts Council and National Heritage Board to spearhead the development of arts in Singapore. [1]

In 1991, the National Arts Council (NAC) was formed from the amalgamation of the Singapore Cultural Foundation, Cultural Division of Ministry of Community Development, Festival of Arts Secretariat and the National Theatre Trust. [2]

Organisation structure

The NAC is made up of the following departments: Education and Development, Engagement and Participation, Strategic Planning and International Relations, Research, Sector Development and Precinct Development. They are supported by the Communications & Marketing, Information Technology, Human Resource & Administration and Finance departments. As of October 2017, top management of the council includes Ambassador-at-Large Chan Heng Chee, Executive Director of GK Goh Holdings Goh Yew Lin and Deputy Secretary of Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth Rosa Huey Daniel. [3]

Supporting the industry

Assistance schemes

The NAC provides funding infrastructure for Singapore's arts community. Each year, through its grants framework, the NAC aims to develop new and existing arts organisations, encourage production of, presentation of and participation in the arts, as well as provide training, research & development for market and audience development needs, both locally and internationally. [4]

Arts spaces

NAC provides artists and arts groups with accessible performing venues for their productions, and to sustainable platforms where artists can collaborate with each other and interact with the wider public. [5]

Community engagement

The NAC works with other agencies to bring arts to the wider public. Through initiatives such as Arts & Disability Forum, [6] Arts In Your Neighbourhood, [7] Art Reach, [8] National Arts Council - Arts Education Programme (NAC-AEP), [9] Noise Singapore, [10] Patron of the Arts Awards, [11] and Silver Arts. [12]

Programmes

The NAC organises and supports a range of nationwide and international events to grow and showcase Singapore's artistic talents:

Controversies

After artist Josef Ng's 1994 performance Brother Cane, in which he bared his buttocks and trimmed his pubic hair to protest media coverage of an anti-gay operation in 1992, [22] for the years 1994 to 2004, the NAC withdrew funding support for the scriptless art forms of performance art as well as forum theatre. [22] Condemning the expressions by both Ng and fellow performer Shannon Tham, who had vomited into a bucket as part of his act, the NAC stated: "By no stretch of the imagination can such acts be construed and condoned as art." [23] Ng and Tham were consequently banned by the NAC from ever performing in Singapore again. [24]

In 2000, the NAC objected to theatre group Agni Kootthu's planned staging of Elangovan's play Talaq, a one-woman show about an Indian Muslim woman's divorce, which had already been staged twice. They suggested that Agni Kootthu arrange a preview of the play for selected persons so that their recommendations would help the Public Entertainment Licence Unit (PELU) of the Singapore Police Force to decide on the licence application. When PELU refused to grant a licence, the NAC supported the staging of the play subject to some changes being made. Agni Kootthu instead decided to hold an invitation-only rehearsal to document the play at the Drama Centre, which it had booked beforehand. NAC, as the Drama Centre's landlord, decided to close the Drama Centre on those days, resulting in a four-hour standoff when S. Thenmoli, president of Agni Kootthu, arrived. The then-Executive Director of NAC called the police and Thenmoli was arrested for alleged trespassing. [25] [26]

In the same year, the NAC withdrew funding of $8,000 from theatre group Drama Box's staging of The VaginaLogue, a one-woman show by Li Xie, because the group's artistic director Kok Heng Leun declined to take down a projected image of a vagina that was used as a backdrop. As a result, the group lost money on the production. Three years later, the NAC declined to fund Drama Box's re-staging of the same play. [27]

In 2002, the NAC demanded that lines from Alfian Sa'at's play Causeway, staged by Teater Ekamatra, be removed due to its supposed incitement of cross-strait and racial tensions. [28] [29]

In 2003, the NAC withdrew its funding of the journal FOCAS: Focus on Contemporary Art and Society Vol. 5: Second FRONT three days before it went to print. The suspected reason was playwright-poet Alfian Sa'at's essays, “The Racist’s Apology”, about being an indigenous Malay in Singapore, and one on NAC's censorship in previous issues of the journal. [30]

In 2006, the NAC informed an unnamed artist invited to the Singapore Biennale that he would need a lawyer for his project, and that he would be held responsible if anything should go wrong in the project. He was also told that he would not receive further support unless he had engaged a lawyer which was not possible as a lawyer would have required half of the budget given. The proposed work had intended to interview 5 individuals who have been active in the arts scene in Singapore and the video recording would be presented as a 5-hour long screening during the Singapore Biennale 2006. The work was not completed and not presented at the Biennale. [31]

In 2007, the NAC removed artist-writer Jason Wee's essay, "Raising the Subject", from the catalogue for "Raised", an art festival that was part of the Singapore Art Show 2007 which thematically focused on migrant labor, reportedly because it included references to Operation Spectrum. [32]

In May 2010, the NAC cut the annual grant given to local theatre company W!LD RICE. It got $170,000, down from $190,000 the year before. It is the lowest annual grant that the company has received from the council. Artistic director Ivan Heng says the council told him funding was cut because its productions promoted so-called "alternative lifestyles", were critical of government policies, and satirised political leaders. Veteran theatre company TheatreWorks also had its funding cut, from $310,000 to $280,000. Its artistic director Ong Keng Sen was told that the company had to have more "local presence". [33]

In early 2011, the NAC revoked its publishing grant for playwright Chong Tze Chien's book Four Plays as it included the controversial play Charged. [34]

In late 2011, following a private preview, the Singapore Art Museum removed Japanese-British artist Simon Fujiwara’s work, Welcome to the Hotel Munber (2010), which featured homoerotic content, despite appropriate advisory notices put up by the museum and the Singapore Biennale, organised by the NAC. [35] This censorship was committed without any consultation with or notification of the artist. [36]

In May 2015, it withdrew $8,000 worth of funding after it deemed that the best-selling graphic novel The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye by Sonny Liew, which it had previously read in full in draft form and approved of, had "sensitive content" and the potential to "undermine the authority and legitimacy of the government". This led to a heated debate between artists and the council. [37]

From November to December 2015, NAC was involved in a fracas with local artists and academics after its CEO Kathy Lai and Chairman Chan Heng Chee argued for the need for and defended NAC's use of censorship. [38] This prompted calls to boycott the NAC. [39]

The NAC has also drawn criticisms for paying $410,000 in consultancy fees to undertake a study on a refuse collection centre for Victoria Theatre and Victoria Concert Hall in 2016, when the eventual bin centre cost $470,000 to build. [40] National Development Minister Lawrence Wong argued that an extensive study had to be done due to the location of the bin centre within the Civic District and that the project was "delivered satisfactorily and at an acceptable cost". [41]

Related Research Articles

LGBT art in Singapore, or queer art in Singapore, broadly refers to modern and contemporary visual art practices that draw on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender+ imagery and themes, addressing topics such as LGBT rights, history and culture in Singapore. Such queer art practices are often by Singaporean or Singapore-based visual artists and curators who identify as LGBT+ or queer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chan Heng Chee</span> Singaporean academic and diplomat

Chan Heng Chee is a Singaporean academic and diplomat who has been serving as Ambassador-at-Large at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs since 2012, Chairwoman of the National Arts Council and Member of the Presidential Council for Minority Rights. She had also served as Singapore Ambassador to the United States between 1996 and 2012.

Censorship in Singapore mainly targets political, racial, religious issues and homosexual content as defined by out-of-bounds markers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Singapore Art Museum</span> Contemporary Art, Museum in Bras Basah Road, Singapore

The Singapore Art Museum is an art museum is located in the Downtown Core district of Singapore. It is the first fully dedicated contemporary visual arts museum in Singapore with one of the world’s most important public collections by local, Southeast and East Asian artists. It collaborates with international art museums to co-curate contemporary art exhibitions.

Dance in Singapore has been an integral part of its culture despite having a relatively short history of creative, artistic and professional dance. The range of dance reflects the cultural diversity of Singapore, from traditional dance forms to contemporary genres.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Singapore Biennale</span> Art biennial

The Singapore Biennale is a large-scale biennial contemporary art exhibition in Singapore, serving as the country’s major platform for international dialogue in contemporary art. It seeks to present and reflect the vigour of artistic practices in Singapore and Southeast Asia within a global context, fostering collaboration and engagement between artists, arts organisations, and the international arts community.

Tan Tarn How ) is a Singaporean playwright and senior research fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies (Singapore). His plays have been staged in Singapore and Hong Kong, and have won numerous awards. In 2011, Epigram Books published a collection of six of his plays.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marine Parade Community Building</span> Community building in Singapore

Marine Parade Community Building is located at 278 Marine Parade Road, Singapore. Opened on 6 March 2000, it houses the formerly separate Marine Parade Community Centre and Marine Parade Public Library, as well as a performing arts group, The Necessary Stage. Designed by William Lim Associates, one of the distinguishing features of the postmodern building is the mural cladding called the "Texturefulness of Life", the largest piece of installation art in Singapore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kuo Pao Kun</span>

Kuo Pao Kun was a playwright, theatre director, and arts activist in Singapore who wrote and directed both Mandarin and English plays. He founded three arts and drama centres in Singapore, conducted and organised a number of drama seminars and workshops, and mentored Singaporean and foreign directors and artists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Artists Village</span> Singapore-based contemporary art group

The Artists Village (TAV) is a Singapore-based contemporary art group. It is known as Singapore's first art colony, founded by contemporary artist Tang Da Wu in 1988.

Tang Da Wu is a Singaporean artist who works in a variety of media, including drawing, painting, sculpture, installation art and performance art. Educated at Birmingham Polytechnic and Goldsmiths' College, University of London, Tang gave his first solo exhibition, consisting of drawings and paintings, in 1970 at the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry. He began engaging in performance art upon returning to Singapore in 1979 following his undergraduate studies.

The Singapore Writers Festival is a literary event organised by the National Arts Council. Inaugurated in 1986, the festival serves a dual function of promoting new and emerging Singaporean and Asian writing to an international audience, as well as presenting foreign writers to Singaporeans.

Loo Zihan is a Singaporean actor, film director, artist and dancer. He was a part-time teacher at School of the Arts, Singapore, National Institute of Education (Singapore) and Nanyang Technological University.

Amanda Heng Liang Ngim is a contemporary artist, curator and speaker from Singapore, who works in Singapore and internationally. As an artist she has a multidisciplinary practice, working collaboratively in contemporary art exhibitions, performance, forums, workshops and art interventions. Her practice explores themes of national identity, collective memory and social relationships, gender politics and other social issues in urban, contemporary Singaporean society. She is the recipient of the 2019 Singapore Biennale's Benesse Prize.

Madeleine Lee is an investment manager and poet in Singapore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sculpture Square</span>

Sculpture Square was a non-profit arts organization located at 155 and 161 Middle Road, Singapore. It was founded by sculptor Sun Yu-Li in 1995 as a venue with the focus on exhibiting and fostering ‘3-dimensional’ and other forms of sculptural arts in Singapore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">5th Passage</span> Artist-run initiative in Singapore

The 5th Passage Artists Limited, commonly known as 5th Passage or 5th Passage Artists, was an artist-run initiative and contemporary art space in Singapore from 1991 to 1994. As a registered, artist-led non-profit organisation, it was one of the earliest of its kind for early-1990s Singapore, with its initial space located at Parkway Parade, a shopping centre in the east of the city. The "meteoric existence" of 5th Passage has been noted alongside other art collectives and alternative spaces existing in 1990s Singapore, such as The Artists Village, The Substation, Plastique Kinetic Worms, and Trimurti.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Suzann Victor</span> Singaporean contemporary artist

Suzann Victor is a Singaporean contemporary artist based in Australia whose practice spans installation, painting, and performance art. Victor is most known for her public artworks and installations that examine ideas of disembodiment, the postcolonial, and the environmental in response to space, context and architecture.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Plastique Kinetic Worms</span> Artist-run space in Singapore

Plastique Kinetic Worms (PKW) was a Singapore-based artist-run space and contemporary art collective, co-founded in 1998 by Singaporean artists Vincent Leow and Yvonne Lee. PKW was one of the few artist-run spaces in Singapore when it opened in the late 1990s, with the 1990 closure of the Ulu Sembawang site of Singapore's first artist colony, The Artists Village, and the disbanding of artist-run space and initiative, 5th Passage, after 1994. Originally organised around a collective of 10 artists, PKW's membership would vary, with around 15 to 20 members at various points of its active years.

Josef Ng Sing Chor is a Singaporean former performance artist. He is known for his 1994 public performance Brother Cane, at the end of which he partially exposed his buttocks and snipped his pubic hair. Brother Cane was reportedly staged in protest of the imprisonment and caning of a group of homosexual men in Singapore the previous year; Ng called his hair-snipping a "symbolic gesture for an artistic purpose". He was handed a lifetime public performance ban by the National Arts Council and fined for violating the Penal Code. Ng later became a curator at various art galleries.

References

  1. Lily Kong; Ching Chia-ho; Chou Tsu-Lung (2015-01-30). Arts, Culture and the Making of Global Cities: Creating New Urban Landscapes in Asia. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 89–90. ISBN   9781784715847.
  2. "About Us: Milestones". National Arts Council. Singapore government. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  3. "About Us:Management". National Arts Council. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  4. "NAC - Funding". www.nac.gov.sg.
  5. "NAC - Arts Spaces". National Arts Council. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  6. "Arts & Disability International Conference 2018". adic2018.sg. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  7. "Arts In Your Neighbourhood".
  8. "Art Reach".
  9. "Overview".
  10. "Noise Singapore".
  11. "Patron of the Arts Awards".
  12. "Silver Arts".
  13. "NAC - Cultural Medallion". www.nac.gov.sg. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  14. "Young Artist Award".
  15. "Golden Point Award".
  16. "Overview".
  17. "Arts Weekend Civic District".
  18. "NAC - Music Competitions". www.nac.gov.sg.
  19. "Singapore Art Week".
  20. "Singapore International Festival of Arts".
  21. "Singapore Writers Festival".
  22. 1 2 Lee, Jian Xuan (23 December 2015). "Curator Josef Ng, whose 1994 performance led to proscription of performance art, joins Pearl Lam Galleries". Singapore Press Holdings. The Straits Times. Retrieved 5 February 2016.
  23. Goh, Wei Hao (2023). "Performing Protest in Singapore: Performance Tactics in Brother Cane and Don't Give Money to the Arts". Konsthistorisk tidskrift . 92 (1): 49. doi: 10.1080/00233609.2023.2181864 .
  24. Goh, Wei Hao (2023). "Performing Protest in Singapore: Performance Tactics in Brother Cane and Don't Give Money to the Arts". Konsthistorisk tidskrift . 92 (1): 44. doi: 10.1080/00233609.2023.2181864 .
  25. Sathiah, Anna (29 October 2000). "Singapore police nab theatre director". Laredo Morning Times.
  26. Au, Alex. "Talaq and religious freedom". Yawning Bread. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  27. Chia, Adeline (13 May 2010). "Don't play play". Singapore Press Holdings. The Straits Times.
  28. See, Martyn (16 February 2008). "Censorship under the PAP : 1959 - 2008". Singapore Rebel. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
  29. "Arts Community Proposal". TheatreWorks. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
  30. Tan, S. E. (23 December 2003). "Focas in a Fracas". Singapore Press Holdings. The Straits Times. Retrieved 5 February 2016.
  31. "Censorship Accounts". ArtsEngage. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  32. "Reading Spaces, Spaces for Reading". Guggenheim Blog. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  33. "NAC cuts funds to theatre company Wild Rice". Singapore Press Holdings. AsiaOne. 5 May 2010. Archived from the original on 20 February 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  34. "Playwright Chong Tze Chien's Charged faces racism head-on". Singapore Press Holdings. The Straits Times. 28 July 2015. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  35. Lingham, Susie (November 2011). "ART AND CENSORSHIP IN SINGAPORE: CATCH 22?". ArtAsiaPacific. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  36. Ng, Yi-Sheng (25 March 2011). "Simon Fujiwara: Censored at the Singapore Biennale 2011". Fridae. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  37. "Unveiling Singapore's next chapter in entertainment & lifestyle". MediaCorp. TODAY. 30 December 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  38. Nanda, Akshita (2015-11-27). "NAC chairman on funding as censorship: State has to balance diverse values when giving grants". The Straits Times. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  39. Gerard, Clarabelle. "Another fracas over Arts Funding: But where are the alternatives?". The Middle Ground. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  40. Yong, Charissa (2016-08-02). "Bin centre was a complicated project, says National Arts Council after AGO flags high consultancy fees". The Straits Times. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  41. Yong, Charissa (2016-08-16). "Consultant's study on bin centre part of extensive feasibility study". The Straits Times. Retrieved 27 July 2017.