Lost & Found: Sea Chanty Project | Singapore Art Museum

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Lost & Found: Sea Chanty Project | Singapore Art Museum
3500+ are interested
Jun 15, 2024(Sat) - Dec 31, 2026(Thu)
This is an online event - join wherever you are!

About the event

Lost & Found: Sea Chanty Project is the first pillar of Lost & Found, a multi-phased curatorial project by the Singapore Art Museum, exploring the significance of archival documentation and records through artistic practices. By studying how artists collect what seems uncollectable, assemble that which resists assembly, and present that which defies visibility, Lost & Found engages with questions concerning the authoritative voice of archives and history.

The Sea Chanty Project expands the conventional understanding of work songs from maritime areas through contemporary interpretation. It draws inspiration from the synergy of action, collectivism and storytelling at the heart of this practice. The project consists of three commissioned music videos: Tirta Maya by Rosemainy Buang & Zachary Chan, Larung by Riar Rizaldi and Imprint of an imprint of an imprint by Vien Valencia. They re-envision various musical genres by employing contemporary audio-visual assemblage techniques and the popular format of short-form streaming videos. Engaging with the resonances between humans and non-humans, these music videos explore connections between water-based communities and the contemporary politics of labour. The videos evoke themes such as displacement, sonic politics and the poetics of memory. 

Tirta Maya by Rosemainy Buang & Zachary Chan
15 June 2024

Tirta Maya (sacred or still waters in Javanese) is composed of three levels, each symbolising a distinct depth: the cosmic ocean, the womb and the underworld. Flow between the levels and navigate the video’s archipelagic landscape borne by an ocean. 

Larung by Riar Rizaldi
15 July 2024

Larung focuses on the predicament of Indonesian seamen. Whilst larung means to float or cast something out to sea, it has also taken on a second meaning, that is commemorative funerals organised by a deceased’s colleagues. Drawing on the genre of Pop Melayu, Larung features a crooning, melancholic tune that recounts the sailors’ experiences of being marooned at sea and their deep longing for shore.

Imprint of an imprint of an imprint by Vien Valencia
15 August 2024

A dam construction threatens the existence of the Tinipak River and the indigenous Dumagat-Remontado community in the Philippines. This multimedia experience captures the essence of the river, and the cultural and economic precarity of the community whose way of life is intimately intertwined with the river.

About the organizer

Singapore Art Museum opened in 1996 as the first art museum in Singapore located in the cultural district of Singapore. Known as SAM, the museum presents contemporary art from a Southeast Asian perspective for artists, art lovers and the art curious in multiple venues across the island, including a new venue in the historic port area of Tanjong Pagar. The museum is building one of the world's most important public collections of Southeast Asian contemporary art, with the aim of connecting the art and the artists to the public and future generations through exhibitions and programmes. SAM is working towards a humane and sustainable future by committing to responsible practices within its processes.

Free