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Equator Art Society
By Yeo, Alicia Kay Ling written on 2006-11-30
National Library Board Singapore
Comments on article: InfopediaTalk
The Equator Art Society was created in 1956 as an artist's
group that promoted the social realist art style in Singapore.
It was also a nationalist and anti-colonialist society, most
active during the 1960s when the country was going through
several political changes. Artists in the group were primarily
concerned with depicting the masses, especially the poorer
classes, and in promoting nation building.
Membership and Activities
Founded by artist Lim Yew Kuan, past society members and
leaders also included other artists Lai Kui Fang, Chua Mia Tee,
Ong Kim Seng and Koeh Sia Yong. The group, made up of mostly
young artists and students, held regular painting classes on
Saturdays at their headquarters no. 56, Lorong 32 in Geylang.
They would organise exhibitions of their social realist works,
whether they are woodcut prints, sculpture, drawings or oil
paintings. The society also co-organised Singapore's first
National Day local art exhibition in 1960, sponsored by the
Ministry of Culture, and in support of then-leading leftist
party, the PAP (People's Action Party).
However, for its leftist leanings, the society came under fire
in 1964. Artist Ho Ho Ying, one-time president of the Modern
Art Society, another local art group, criticized the Equator
Art Society members' art works as lacking in creativity and
art direction, being more preoccupied with making
social-political statements. The society responded with its own
subtle barbs by stating in its 1965 exhibition catalogue:
Unfortunately, there are artists who are only trying to copy
Western art which has not the least of our local flavour.
Even more changes were in store for the group, when Singapore
was born as an independent nation in 1965. The new PAP-led
government was now on a quest for stability and its focus was
on harmonious nation-building. Hence, social realist art with
its radical nature lost its favour.
The Equator Art Society eventually disbanded in 1972. The
actual facts surrounding its demise have not been published,
although the society was alleged to have grown into a front for
communist activities. In general, the social realist art style
in Singapore thus declined from the 1970s onward.
Quote
"The value of the genuine school of art lies in the fact
that it does not lose its integrity amidst the ugly commercial
dealings belonging to the decadent bourgeois. Instead, it
always works to faithfully reflect or expose the very root of
the reality of life, to spread the Truth, the Virtue, and the
Beauty of this world. (
Source: The Equator Art Society's 1966 exhibition
catalogue).
Author
Alicia Yeo Kay Ling
References
Kwok, K.C. (1996). Channels & Confluences: A History of
Singapore Art. Singapore: Singapore Art
Museum.
(Call no.: RSING 709.5957
KWO).
Lim, R. (2003, June 29). Art saved him from politics. The
Sunday Times, Life!
Section.
Lim, C.T. (2005). Fragments of the past: Political prints of
post-war Singapore. The Heritage Journal, 2
(1), 22-47. Retrieved November 20th, 2006, from
http://www.epress.nus.edu.sg/nhb/include/getdoc.php?id=64&article=14&mode=pdf
Further Readings
Ho, H. Y. (n.d.). Oral history interview
(Special projects: Visual arts:
Ho Ho
Ying). National
Archives of Singapore. Retrieved November 30, 2006, from www.a2o.com.sg.
The information in this article is valid as at 2006 and correct
as far as we are able to ascertain from our sources. It
is not intended to be an exhaustive or complete history of the
subject. Please contact the Library for further reading
materials on the
topic.
Subject
Organisations>>Associations
Associations, institutions, etc--Singapore
Arts
>> Ong Kim Seng
All Rights Reserved. National Library Board Singapore 2004.