i Light : Rekindling Nature, Reinterpreting Culture

Following an earlier post on the i Light Marina Bay 2012 installations to an inside-outside theme, here’s a collection of works that I’ve approached with a nature-culture categorisation based on the pieces’ subject matter.

Raising awareness on the sustainable future of our earth is a central motivation behind the i Light Festival that is a marriage of energy-efficient lighting technologies and concepts with art. During the three-week festival period, properties around the bay area as well as inland are galvanised to take part in the “Switch Off, Turn Up” Campaign where buildings are encouraged to switch off unnecessary lightings and turn up the thermostat of sir-conditioning.

Marina Bay bejewelled with lights is a truly spectacular sight! Through the “Switch Off, Turn Up” Campaign in conjunction with i Light, 79 tonnes of carbon emission has been reduced. And that’s only within the first week of the festival!

With all the nature-inspired installations that celebrated everything above the ground and under the sea with a sampling of culturally-inspired installations, the perimeter around Marina Bay became a circle of life that embodied the aspirations of humanity in light of urbanity. And here are the artistic expressions as a result of embracing globalisation modernism while cherishing nature and one’s culture…

Tree Stories by Angela Chong (Singapore)

After visiting the i Light Festival numerous times and awed by all the flashy light works, it took me some time to adjust to the quiet, simple allure of Tree Stories. Initially, it appeared to me that the installation was merely poems mounted on tree trunks instead of a wall or Facebook post with a rim of bulbs serving as reading light during nightfall. The work didn’t look like it required much effort or was it groundbreakingly creative with the use of lights.

Then as I was reading the selection of poems overlayed on living tree trunks with ants scurrying up and down the words, flies seemingly attracted to me for reasons I refuse to acknowledge, I began to appreciate the profound simplicity of this work.

True to Angela’s intention, her installation did achieve the intended effect of slowing me down to appreciate the surrounding, to smell the ‘roses’, in the midst of my busy lifestyle. The installation was a little out of the way from the clustering of other light exhibits and I wanted to just come here, take some photos and leave. I was astonished that when I was ready to go, I’d spent half an hour with it. On average, I loiter around an exhibit for at most 15 minutes.

Angela told us during an Artist Talks session that she grew up with trees. Although she doesn’t look like lady Tarzan, her piece revealed the inner tree-hugger within.

The installations don’t seem like much, but there’s a certain raw energy to it.

Giving voice and personality to trees that are a heritage of nature in the area.

This poem is a conversation between the tree and the cloud and how each envied the other. Here’s my favourite dialogue in the poem… Tree : The higher I grow, the further I will be grounded. Cloud : The fuller I get, the lower I float. How very true in many of lives’ situations! The higher up we are in an organisation, the harder it is to quit; and the more we are satisfied, the lower we will go to keep that satisfaction going.

Sometimes being too strong and rigid isolate us from being able to heal with affection. Well, that’s my interpretation of this poem.

When I took this photo, I thought about how Marina Bay Sands must’ve been a lucid dream in the early days of Singapore. How unimaginable and what an impossibility this building must’ve been. But it’s now a possibility (that’s why I tried to make ‘im’ less prominent in the photo).

Not just weather, but people have become more unpredictable especially in what is supposed to be a rooted relationship. I miss those days where monogamy is all that we know.

Looking at life through poems.

Living words.

Feeling the bugs and rain added a multi-sensory experience of Tree Stories. Forget interactive media, this is as experiential as one can get with a work of art.

Coral Garden by Olivia d’Aboville (The Philippines)

The Philippines with its massive archipelago of more than 7,000 islands make it home to some of the most beautiful dive sites with dramatic coral formations in Southeast Asia. But the practise of blast fishing had destroyed many of these undersea gardens.

And I think this rather sweet piece by Olivia is her way of reminding us of the plight of these diminishing coral establishments and the marine life they support.

Cheerleaders will love this installation coz you can combine a bunch of these and make it a glittering pom pom!

The fluffy mushroom-shaped sculptures were made from re-used cocktail stirrers. No wonder I find them so irresistable!

Grass of the sea on land. Please do not sit on them although they kinda look inviting as low stools.

Spinning the Panasonic Lumix GF3 on one of the corals.

A reinterpretation of corals with a massive collection of plastic cocktail stirrers.

5QU1D by Ryf Zaini (Singapore)

A festival commission, 5QU1D is spelt with alphabets and numbers to reflect the interweaving of urbanity with the natural environment, thereby creating a ‘mechanimal’ that’s adapted to us while we learnt to live with them.

Our very own Little Mermaid in the clutches of Ursula? “Out of the sea… Wish I could be… Part of that world…”

Pale sotong.

Caressing the tip of the front tentacle sends light waves that colourises 5QU1D.

Time to disco!

5QU1D is made of recycled and used electronic parts and LED lights.

With some wasabe and sakae will be out of this world!

Garden of Light by Hexogon Solution (Singapore)

One of the main attractions at i Light Marina Bay 2012 is the massive outdoor projection show, Garden of Light. I thought it’s such an ingenious idea to use the ‘petal’ structure of the Art Science Museum as a canvas to unfurl the story of a butterfly’s search for nature in the modern, digital world.

Three of the projectors sitting on the Helix Bridge.

Showtime! The projectors must be really powerful for clear projections at such a long distance.

The Art Science Museum and Marina Bay Sands have become a kind of modern cultural icons of Singapore.

Looks like a huge flower blooming by the bay.

The best time to shoot is 8:00pm and 9:30pm when a nightly light show takes over Marina Bay. It’s an all-out extravaganza!

Urban Makyoh by Light Collective (United Kingdom)

I have no idea that Makyoh is a form of ancient Japanese reflective light art until this exhibit had me enlightened. Also known as ‘magic mirrors’, the traditional Makyoh mirrors were highly polished metal surfaces with marks made on them to form patterns. These designs can only be fully appreciated when light is reflected off the mirrors onto a wall.

But you are definitely not one with a good sense of direction.

Delighting in a piece of Japanese cultural heritage.

Imagine having a Makyoh installed at home and you can get an ever changing wallpaper!

Different mirror plates to shine on to project their designs onto the wall.

“Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who’s the most Foodielicious of them all?!” And the mirror replied, “Kawaii oishi neh!”

Gap the Mind by Be Takerng Pattanopas (Thailand)

Ohm in the city. Gap of Mind exudes the quiet strength of calm in the middle of our bustling Central Business District area. Well, that’s the feel I got from seeing and hearing it. The installation is a light and sound journey to inner peace.

But not everyone feels the same…

Got a chance to see the exhibit before it was pieced together. The installation draws its inspiration from monotone Lanna umbrellas traditionally used by Thai monks.

Saffron cloth being attached to an umbrella’s rim.

Resembling human-sized yellow lanterns, I heard a Chinese national remark that the pods resembled 血滴子(Flying Guillotine)! Another likened them to mobile toilets. *Slaps forehead*

The gong-inspired music was soothing and magnified spirituality but when I tried standing in one of the pods to reclaim a sense of calm, I became so conscious and aware how I must’ve looked to the people outside the chrome cocoon. Perhaps that’s what Gap of Mind is trying to achieve… to deepen our level of self-awareness.

Light of the Merlion by OCUBO (Portugal)

Another blockbuster exhibit is Light of the Merlion, another mind-blowing projection mapping installation where our evergreen national icon is given a splash of different colours every other minute!

The idea behind this piece is to let Singaporeans make the Merlion more personal by giving it a colourful paint-over. Having grown up with the white half-lion-half-fish statue and seeing it spew water for 37 years, I’ve never seen the Merlion more alive, vibrant and interesting to watch!

Marina Bay is not just an urban waterfront development but a not-to-be-missed tourist attraction.

Large, medium, small… The old and new icons of Singapore.

A chance for Singaporeans and visitors to leave their creative mark on our dear Merlion.

The precision in projection mapping is just amazing! And there are so many individual parts of the statue that can be coloured.

Point and paint. To think that the light projection on such a huge statue is control by this touchscreen interface.

i Light Marina Bay reached out to different generations to bring home the message of sustainability and art appreciation.

Never in the same light. With the multitude of parts to paint on the Merlion and varying colour palatte, I think everyone who took a shot of the Merlion at different times would have been unique.

This is the LAST weekend to catch all the i Light installations before the festival ends on Sunday, 1 April. Friends have been asking me if the festival is truly worth a visit.

My answer is always, “What’s there to lose in visiting? The festival is free, the interactivity and shows are innovative both visually and themetically, and the photo opportunities are endless.”

Furthermore. if this edition of i Light is missed, it’s another 2-year wait before the bay will see such displays of creativity again!

Day 088 : Merlion in Drag

Since agreeing to be an Official Blogger for i Light Marina Bay 2012, I’ve lost count of the times I’ve been to the bay area to photograph the lights. I prefer to come during weekedays after work to avoid the crowd but that means I’ll have to endure hunger till 11:30pm to have dinner.

I usually eat after I get home as dining around the bay is expensive. A meal costs about S$20 so if I’ve been there 5 times, I would’ve spent at least S$100. So if you intend to shoot the i Light installations these few days, bring along some food.

This is the last week that the festival will be on so don’t miss out on this rare opportunity to photograph the artworks!

Tonight, I finally made it to see Light of the Merlion by OCUBO from Portugal. I’d seen countless photos and videos of this projection piece but being there in person was just something surreal.

I’ve seen  our national icon in a prettier light!

Day 071 : Electricfying Nightscape

Dropped by the bay area again today to attend a talk by some of the artists. After that, I strolled over to one of i Light’s much lauded showstopper, Garden of Light.

Featuring a large-scale projection mapped onto the iconic Art Science Museum’s outer skin, the artwork brought nature to the waterfront. Watching the projection show for the first time was so magical despite the rain. Will definitely go back to shoot it again :)

i Light Marina Bay 2012 Official Launch

The anticipation is over… i Light Marina Bay 2012 was officially switched on yesterday with a bevy of light art all ready to dazzle, sparkle and shine!

This post captures the happenings during the launch event, some of the installations I came across that evening and the fun I had camwhoring with the works of art :)

i Light Marina Bay 2012 is in full bloom! Catch this installation titled 'Planting Shadows' and many others along the perimeter of Marina Bay from now till 1 Apr 2012.

This is Jerrald, one of the many student volunteer guides from Temasek Polytechnic who will help visitors appreciate the inspiration behind an installation. I was so impressed by Jerrald's initiative in approaching me to share information about Planting Shadows when he saw me taking photos it. Thumbs up!

Yeah, it's time to take out the camera to go photo farming at i Light 2012...

Planting Shadows is by a group of five Singaporean artists who call themselves, Vertical Submarine. So why are the sunflowers grey? The inspiration behind this piece is a poem by local writer Chien Swee-Teng (hmm… is this where the artists got their moniker from? Chien Swee-Teng in Chinese sounds like ‘潜水艇’, which means ‘submarine’!).

The poem tells the tale of a sunflower plantation owner who made a pact with an imp who lives in an empty sunflower oil bottle. In exchange for prosperity and success of his sunflower business, the owner must give up his ability to see colour. Kinda like the Little Mermaid giving up her voice to become human.

But more than just a physical realisation of the story, Planting Shadows invites visitors to appreciate the beautiful form and shape of sunflowers without the interference of colour. However, there’s a twist to this piece. During night fall, the flowers light up to create a visual harvest. I’m not putting up the afterdark shot of this installation so that you can come visit the exhibit and experience the poetic aura yourself! Heh heh…

Light Meets Asia

Happening once every two years, this is part duex of i Light Marina Bay after a successful run in 2010. The theme for this sophomore edition is ‘Light Meets Asia’ and it brings together light artists and designers from 17 countries and territories. The festival features around 30 installations, of which 22 are by artists and designers based in Asia.

The launch was held at The Promontory @ Marina Bay on 9 Apr 2012, 7pm.

Junk Jam drumming up a tune for sustainability with drums made from discarded tin cans and plastic barrels.

E.T. would be jealous of his multiple lighted fingers. Let the healing powers of light fill you this March at Marina Bay!

A tall-order of fun with masquerade LED stilt walkers on parade.

Catch them on weekends during the festival period from 7:30 - 8:30pm.

Sass in the city. LED twirlers will be spinning up a wave of lights on weekends during the 3-week festival.

Always a gem... with the zany Juliana all decked out in another one of her eye-pooping fashion creations and the blogger who's on everyone's invite list, Hong Peng.

Energy-saving lights. i Light Marina Bay is not just about beautifying our cityscape with illuminated art but also to raise awareness about environmentally-friendly practices for a sustainable future.

Guest-of-honour - Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance and Minister for Manpower, urned on i Light. His short speech was peppered with humour especially the part about him being perfect to launch i Light because his darker skin is light absorbing. LOL! Not so funny was his bodyguard though.

Artists, curators, Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) team, and festival partners... The people who put the 'i' in i Light.

A photo with the festival's appointed bloggers, photographers, and Festival Director, Mary-Anne Kyriakou (the beautiful mom-to-be).

With photography maestro, Calvin Huang. I learnt a trick from him last night. To have your face looking slim in a photo, always angle the body to the side and turn to face the camera. Picturesque waterfront setting with great-looking light art, i Light Marina Bay is glowing with photo opportunities.

Create a light spectacle of your own with glow sticks, torches and finger lights purchasable near the Breeze Shelter a short distance from The Promontory @ Marina Bay. A set of 4 finger lights costs S$5.00.

After the launch ceremony and reception with gorgeous pizzas by Verve Pizza Bar @ Marina Bay, I was in the mood for some sleuthing. I think one of the thrills of coming to i Light is looking for the artworks. They are not hard to find, but there’s a “ah-ha” moment when I finally encounter them.

I’ve seen photos and read briefs about the works so seeing them upclose triggered a sense of familiarity in me, like meeting someone you’ve befriended online for the first time.

Bibigloo by BIBI (France)

Imparting a chill factor to the bay is Bibigloo by French artist, BIBI. Assembled with 250 recycled plastic jerry cans, the work aims to draw focus on global warming issues and the melting polar caps.

I wonder... if I slept in Bibigloo, would I have a Dream of the Red Ice Kachang (红豆梦 instead of 红楼梦)?

iTouch at i Light. Many of the exhibits encourage visitors to interact with them.

A peek into Bibigloo.

The Gate by Li Hui (China)

Walking along The Promontory stretch of Marina Bay, I noticed a shimmering red burn emanating from Marina Bay City Gallery in the distance. The flashy glare demands attention and announces the exhibit it comes from before I was even close. That’s The Gate by Chinese artist, Li Hui, a masculine piece that hallmarks the role of gates as portals that connects one realm to another.

Li Hui presenting his i Light inspiration to Singapore. His works are imbued with high concept ideas executed with the use of innovative exhibitory techniques.

This shot of The Gate's laser projection was shot near the Breeze Shelter, which I estimate to be about 200m from the Marina Bay City Gallery where the piece is housed.

Light has the ability to expand an installation's presence much larger than the artworks themselves.

Enter a whole new dimension of art appreciation through The Gate.

Visitors become a work of art themselves when passing through The Gate.

Illumination Disorders II by Tay Swee Siong (Singapore)

Outside the Marina Bay City Gallery stands a beautiful mess. Composed of discarded materials, Singaporean sculptor Tay Swee Siong gave the trash a second life with this whimsical sculpture that lights up in response to voices.

If you need someone to talk to and respond to you, this is your piece!

Who's the garbage here with such a trashy pose?

BioShell by Shinya Okuda (Japan / Singapore)

Departing Marina Bay City Gallery, I walked further along the bay in the direction of Marina Bay Sands. That was when my path was crossed by these two ‘things’…

Crouching Cougar Hidden Skeleton? Kungfu by the bay or escaped zombies from a bio hazard zone?

IMO, the best way to enjoy i Light and Marina Bay is to get a friends who are uninhibited in front of the camera, feed them with alcohol and start clicking away. Calvin and Juliana were so spontaneous, the Panasonic Lumix GF3 that I was using to shoot had a field day!

Now back to this next exhibit… BioShell by Shinya Okuda. With Calvin and Juliana in their wild state, the installation sure comes in handy to have them stored away!

BioShell is a lightweight temporary shelter illuminated purely by LED lights,

'Wildlife' contained but the infection of fun continues to spread with their quirkiness. Naise!

The fully biodegradable disaster shelter was adorned with stickers on 11 Mar to commemorate the massive Japan earthquake that caused a meltdown of the country's Fukushima power plant a year ago.

The Light Dam by Uno Lai (Taiwan)

I shared in my i Light Sneak Peek post I’ll talk more about the inspiratino behind this piece as old to me by the artist himself, Uno Lai. According to him, this installation is partly self-sustaining as 30% of the light is recycled.

How does it work? Uno has installed small solar chips into each of the cubes that capture energy generated from the lights. The stored energy is in turn reused to power the lights, creating a self-sufficient installation.

Currently, the installation is only able to capture 30% of the light energy for reuse. Ideally, according to Uno, the chip could also capture sunlight for energy so that the artwork would require no external power source. 30% or 100%, this prototype is a clever idea nonetheless!

Uno explained that when visitors put their hands into the holes, the light in the cube will dim slightly because the energy-capturing sensor is being blocked.

I'm no light technician. All I know is that The Light Dam makes a uber cool backdrop for a photoshoot. With this act-cute pose, I was afraid I would short-circuit the installation.

No, no... I'm not having a manicure or getting electrocuted. The reason for my expression as I put my hands through the holes was because... (see next photo)

... this was waiting at the other end.

Hope you had fun looking at the photos and found inspiration in the featured installations in this post. I’ll share more of the works when I get to visit and shoot them in the upcoming weeks.

Meanwhile, make a date with i Light Marina Bay and create your own artful memories :) Below is a map of the festival with all the locations of the installations marked out. For a larger version of the map, click here.

Festival Info :

Duration : 9 Mar – 1 Apr 2012

Operating Hours : 7:30 – 11:00pm nightly

Admission : Free

Click here for i Light Marina Bay 2012 Official Website

Day 069 : Illuminating Marina Bay

Let there be light! Yesterday, the sun experienced its first massive solar storm in years that sent radioactive magnetic shockwaves to our planet.

But today, within Asia, in Singaore, at Marina Bay, a celebration of light began… i Light Marina Bay 2012 was officially launched with a masquerade of innovative light installations that embraced creativity, fun and sustainability!

Art has never been more accesible :)

Day 066 : i Light Marina Bay Sneak Peek

i Light Marina Bay 2012 doesn’t happen till this Friday (9 Mar) but I was eager-eyed to get a peek. So armed with the Panasonic Lumix GF3, I made a trip down to the bay after work in the hope of catching the artists in action as they set up their pieces and finding out their inspirations in person.

Unfortunately, most of them were busy assembling their exhibits and I didn’t want to be a bother. Furthermore, some of the artists and I have a chicken-and-duck thing going… we don’t speak the same language. i Light 2012 features light-art from prolific regional light artists as well as those from Australia, China, France, Japan, Portugal, Sweden, and USA. Such a feast for the eyes!

And here’s a sneak behind-the-scenes peek at some of the installations that will turn Marina Bay into a lighted playground for all!

Putting the light festival together requires the efforts of many.

This installation is titled Storybox. It explores the role of light in inspiring and shaping our urban landscape.

Titled Receptacle, this installation reminds me of a relaxing beachfront spa pavilion.

Her name is Oar and she's the assistant of Thai lighting maestro, Be Takerng Pattanopas. Titled Gap the Mind, these lighted cocoon lanterns allow you to step inside and experience a meditative state with music and lights.

The installation brings a sense of Zen to Marina Bay, a great lunchtime respite for busy executives in the Central Business District area.

Something massive is coming out of the water... its a giant 5QU1D! Yup, it's spelt 5QU1D to represent the Singaporean artist's interpretation of nature's fusion with urbanisation. The light sculpture is aptly placed in front of commemorative Olympic rings... an allusion to calamari rings perhaps? LOL.

The monster has yet to come alive. I'm curious how 5QU1D will look when it's completed.

BioShell. This piece looked like an inflatable HASMAT capsule or a floatation sphere ready to go into the bay waters!

Hands off the exhibits for now until the official launch this Friday. By then, these lighted installations will welcome everyone to interact with them.

This is one of the hottest light artists in Taiwan, Uno Lai. His piece, The Light Dam, has both an aspirational and functional approach to light as a self-sustaining energy source.

Uno shared with me his thoughts about setting up The Light Dam which I will post once I get a photo of his finished work.

Fancy / Lightweight is the name of this exhibit that brings to life those computer screensaver line graphics. I strummed the strings and shot with a slower shutter speed to get this 'laser' effect. I think the organisers will frown that I'm sharing my 'abuse' of art to create art. Heh heh. Try it. It's fun!

Acrylic popsicles of Crystallised. From this work on, I've arrived at The Float. The installations are lined all around Marina Bay so it's a journey of discovery along the waterfront alcove.

Love the alien-geometric form of Parmenides 1. It requires precision projection on the rubix-like sculpture which involves a lot of tweaking and adjustments to the projectors. While I was there, the artist was engrossed in perfecting the mapping of videos on the pointy sphere.

Forming and dissolving, the sculpture takes on different skins and looks with mesmerising effect!

An assembly of candy-striped lampshades... something sweet is coming your way. Sweet Home that is. The lighting project aims to turn ugly spaces into pretty places.

Titled Key Frames, this installation features a collection of lighted figures in various poses. So fun to see what I usually draw on paper to represent human, the stick figures, in 3D!

This is Olivier fixing the power to light up the stick figures. I tried to explain I'm an official blogger for iLight and if he could stretch out his hand for me to pose for a pic but he just looked at me blankly. I hope he had dinner for working so tirelessly though.

Even though I just popped by to have a quick browse, I ended up spending 3 hours at i Light and I didn’t see everything. So if you’re planning to visit, plan for repeats in order to see all the works. And if you’re into photography, the best times to come would be during week nights as human traffic is less congested. But then, perhaps the bay will be busy once all the pieces are up.

I hope this behind-the-scene look will excite and open up a personal level for you when enjoying the works. This is just the beginning… :)

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