The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss

In South-East Asia, numerous cities are experiencing a dire shortage of columbarium spaces as population density increases and land for the dead diminishes to make way for the living. For a land-scarce city-state such as Singapore, there is an urgent need for the country to find ways of circumventin...

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Main Author: Sim, Merriley Enci
Other Authors: Yam Min Yee Angeline
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158667
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1586672023-03-11T19:58:04Z The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss Sim, Merriley Enci Yam Min Yee Angeline School of Art, Design and Media angeline_yam@ntu.edu.sg Visual arts and music::Drawing, design and illustration In South-East Asia, numerous cities are experiencing a dire shortage of columbarium spaces as population density increases and land for the dead diminishes to make way for the living. For a land-scarce city-state such as Singapore, there is an urgent need for the country to find ways of circumventing this impending columbarium crisis while ensuring that the social need of its people to remain present in the world, even beyond death, is appeased. Following the global rise in online memorial sites and services, one potential avenue that Singapore can tap into is the use of virtual spaces to mourn and immortalize the dead. As such, this project aims to create an interactive memorial website that explores the use of virtual spaces for preserving and extending the personhood of an individual after death. To inform the design of the project’s envisioned outcome, an online survey was conducted among 31 respondents between the ages of 15 to 35 in Singapore on their perception of memorial websites. This age group was chosen as they are the demographic of Singaporeans that would most likely be impacted by the country’s shortage of columbarium spaces in the future. From the results gathered, the survey found significant gaps in the design, functionality, and visibility of local memorial websites that must be resolved in order to convince younger Singaporeans of the feasibility of online memorials as alternatives or supplements to traditional modes of memorialization. Unlike other memorial websites, the project’s final deliverable - Memori is centered around the concept of creating a “second home” for the dead. In Memori, users are able to design a virtual room for their loved ones using customizable furniture and objects. Upon entering a room, visitors are able to interact with four main objects to access information about the deceased: 1) a calendar that displays a timeline of events, 2) a letterbox that features a wall of messages left behind by family and friends, 3) a large picture frame that shows a short biography of the deceased, and 4) a small picture frame that presents a gallery of photographs uploaded by visitors. Design Art: Visual Communication Keywords: Digital Memorialization, Identity Preservation, Spatial Transcendence, Virtual Space, Necrogeography, Death rites, Web Design Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Communication 2022-06-06T02:24:10Z 2022-06-06T02:24:10Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Sim, M. E. (2022). The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158667 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158667 en ADM17.21.U1830887J application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Visual arts and music::Drawing, design and illustration
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::Drawing, design and illustration
Sim, Merriley Enci
The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
description In South-East Asia, numerous cities are experiencing a dire shortage of columbarium spaces as population density increases and land for the dead diminishes to make way for the living. For a land-scarce city-state such as Singapore, there is an urgent need for the country to find ways of circumventing this impending columbarium crisis while ensuring that the social need of its people to remain present in the world, even beyond death, is appeased. Following the global rise in online memorial sites and services, one potential avenue that Singapore can tap into is the use of virtual spaces to mourn and immortalize the dead. As such, this project aims to create an interactive memorial website that explores the use of virtual spaces for preserving and extending the personhood of an individual after death. To inform the design of the project’s envisioned outcome, an online survey was conducted among 31 respondents between the ages of 15 to 35 in Singapore on their perception of memorial websites. This age group was chosen as they are the demographic of Singaporeans that would most likely be impacted by the country’s shortage of columbarium spaces in the future. From the results gathered, the survey found significant gaps in the design, functionality, and visibility of local memorial websites that must be resolved in order to convince younger Singaporeans of the feasibility of online memorials as alternatives or supplements to traditional modes of memorialization. Unlike other memorial websites, the project’s final deliverable - Memori is centered around the concept of creating a “second home” for the dead. In Memori, users are able to design a virtual room for their loved ones using customizable furniture and objects. Upon entering a room, visitors are able to interact with four main objects to access information about the deceased: 1) a calendar that displays a timeline of events, 2) a letterbox that features a wall of messages left behind by family and friends, 3) a large picture frame that shows a short biography of the deceased, and 4) a small picture frame that presents a gallery of photographs uploaded by visitors. Design Art: Visual Communication Keywords: Digital Memorialization, Identity Preservation, Spatial Transcendence, Virtual Space, Necrogeography, Death rites, Web Design
author2 Yam Min Yee Angeline
author_facet Yam Min Yee Angeline
Sim, Merriley Enci
format Final Year Project
author Sim, Merriley Enci
author_sort Sim, Merriley Enci
title The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
title_short The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
title_full The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
title_fullStr The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
title_full_unstemmed The future of mourning in Singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
title_sort future of mourning in singapore: an exploration into the use of digital memorials for dealing with loss
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158667
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