BETWEEN THE STUDIO AND THE STREET
Most of us experience the city in a distracted fashion when travelling on foot. And increasingly so. Our walks are often passages along familiar routes between points of arrival and departure. A guided city walk is an opportunity to romance one’s city whilst having a conversation about human conditions, intentions and consequence. The notion of walkers as domestic tourists is perhaps a foreign idea in Singapore as one can traverse the island with relative ease. However, one does turn into a tourist during the course of a walk as one encounters facets of the city one was not attentive to.
HOW DO PEOPLE MOVE IN YOUR CITY
Although every walk by its performative nature is unique, there are features which have come to characterise my walks. As a group activity, my criticism of most walks is that they are lectures on foot. And what of good banter? A colourful rant? Amusing tangents? Irony? Typically a walk is limited to a single neighbourhood but my walks tend to cut across neighbourhoods in a bid to craft a grand narrative of change in the inner city. Often clocking in at three hours, the walks are designed to allow participants to leave or stay as they wish. The walks register both change and absence. I often employ visual metaphors to make the unfamiliar a lot more palatable: a façade can be inspected like a layer cake or industrial lettering compared to sanitary plumbing in both shape and form.
FRAGMENTS: A STROLL FROM BEACH ROAD TO OPHIR ROAD
On a walk from Beach Road to Ophir Road, Mackerel’s Marc photographed fragments of the cityscape that I noticed had a story to tell no matter how small. Join me on a ramble as I cast my lens on Singapore.
The demolition site of Keypoint is as good a starting point as any. Amidst the mangled carcass of a building lie streets that have been shaped and reshaped. Minto Street is still there but it has moved over the decades. The finial of the ‘leaning tower’ of Hajjah Fatimah Mosque is barely visible in the background.