Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’

This paper examines participatory art and its growing popularity in contemporary art practices in the Singaporean art scene. It focuses specifically on the relationship between local creatives and State (and State-affiliated) funders, which has remained as one of the most significant determining fac...

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Main Author: Ho, Philip Zhi Yang
Other Authors: Chul Heo
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173251
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1732512024-02-01T09:53:45Z Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’ Ho, Philip Zhi Yang Chul Heo School of Art, Design and Media chulheo@ntu.edu.sg, Visual arts and music::General::Government policies Visual arts and music::General::Social aspects This paper examines participatory art and its growing popularity in contemporary art practices in the Singaporean art scene. It focuses specifically on the relationship between local creatives and State (and State-affiliated) funders, which has remained as one of the most significant determining factors in the development of the socio-political potential of the arts locally. Driven by the shared motivation between many who have been captivated by participatory art and Critical Cultural Studies scholars to explore concrete ways of materially shifting the conditions of ownership over the means of cultural production, the researcher conducted an ethnographic case study following the production of a participatory art project titled Edible Art Club, co-produced by a local arts platform named Unseen Art Initiatives. This was done to gather critical and qualitative insider information on the dynamics between parties from both groups. By approaching the production process for Edible Art Club and other participatory art projects by Unseen Art Initiatives which were also made possible with the support of State (and State-affiliated) funders as an extended site of mediation between both groups, this thesis attempts to shed light on limitations and opportunities that come into play at different stages of production—specifically those revolving around the prevailing air of censorship and the prevalent use of econo-pragmatic language in Singapore. In this manner, the hope is that more will be understood about how to improve mediation State (and State-affiliated) funders and members of the local art community so that they can both continue contributing to the expansion of opportunities for audience-participants to take ownership over such projects. Overall, the findings of this study reaffirm that while State (and State-affiliated) funders do generally possess and maintain predominant influence over the production of participatory art projects in Singapore. At the same time, these findings also reiterate that when the relationship between such funders and members the local art community is examined detail, the complexity of, exceptions to, and opportunities to negotiate the commonly assumed dynamics of power between the two become more apparent. Master's degree 2024-01-22T05:40:35Z 2024-01-22T05:40:35Z 2023 Thesis-Master by Research Ho, P. Z. Y. (2023). Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173251 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173251 10.32657/10356/173251 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). 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::General::Government policies
Visual arts and music::General::Social aspects
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::General::Government policies
Visual arts and music::General::Social aspects
Ho, Philip Zhi Yang
Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’
description This paper examines participatory art and its growing popularity in contemporary art practices in the Singaporean art scene. It focuses specifically on the relationship between local creatives and State (and State-affiliated) funders, which has remained as one of the most significant determining factors in the development of the socio-political potential of the arts locally. Driven by the shared motivation between many who have been captivated by participatory art and Critical Cultural Studies scholars to explore concrete ways of materially shifting the conditions of ownership over the means of cultural production, the researcher conducted an ethnographic case study following the production of a participatory art project titled Edible Art Club, co-produced by a local arts platform named Unseen Art Initiatives. This was done to gather critical and qualitative insider information on the dynamics between parties from both groups. By approaching the production process for Edible Art Club and other participatory art projects by Unseen Art Initiatives which were also made possible with the support of State (and State-affiliated) funders as an extended site of mediation between both groups, this thesis attempts to shed light on limitations and opportunities that come into play at different stages of production—specifically those revolving around the prevailing air of censorship and the prevalent use of econo-pragmatic language in Singapore. In this manner, the hope is that more will be understood about how to improve mediation State (and State-affiliated) funders and members of the local art community so that they can both continue contributing to the expansion of opportunities for audience-participants to take ownership over such projects. Overall, the findings of this study reaffirm that while State (and State-affiliated) funders do generally possess and maintain predominant influence over the production of participatory art projects in Singapore. At the same time, these findings also reiterate that when the relationship between such funders and members the local art community is examined detail, the complexity of, exceptions to, and opportunities to negotiate the commonly assumed dynamics of power between the two become more apparent.
author2 Chul Heo
author_facet Chul Heo
Ho, Philip Zhi Yang
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Ho, Philip Zhi Yang
author_sort Ho, Philip Zhi Yang
title Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’
title_short Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’
title_full Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’
title_fullStr Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’
title_full_unstemmed Challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in Singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘Edible Art Club’
title_sort challenges and opportunities of producing participatory art in singapore: a case study of the preproduction for unseen art initiative’s ‘edible art club’
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173251
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