The art industry can be an intimidating scene where it seems a small few hold the key in dictating what the rest of the world perceives as “good” or “bad” art. This is where the Affordable Art Fair comes in. By helping people fall in love with art by giving them the confidence to trust their own taste and style, they are also disrupting the business model of art and the stronghold that art dealers and critics have over the industry.
2023 sees the Affordable Art Fair maintain its presence in Singapore as the longest-standing art fair in the region. In November, the F1 Pit Building will play host to the fair, transforming itself into an immersive space where rare art meets a contemporary lifestyle. Singapore’s Affordable Art Fair holds the same ethos from the day it started. Art is not just for the elite, it is for everyone; be it an art aficionado or a budding art collector just starting their personal collection. Affordable Art Fair is the one-stop destination to indulge, explore and elevate your senses with art of all mediums. The Fair removes the elitism known to be held in the art community by presenting artwork from contemporary oil paintings to life-sized sculptures, for every space and budget.
Why the Affordable Art Fair is a Must-Visit:
The fair showcases a plethora of artworks in an environment that is free from intimidation or judgment. The Affordable Art Fair is about celebrating art in a space that is both friendly and transparent. Transparency is particularly applicable for the pricing as all artworks are prominently displayed with their respective prices which are under SGD15,000. 75 percentof artworks displayed are priced below SGD7,500. A delightful selection under just SGD1,000 makes it easier for everyone to find that perfect piece that speaks to both their taste and budget. What sets the Affordable Art Fair apart from other art events is its distinctive presence within the art fair scene, attributed to the Affordable Art Fair’s unique approach to an accessible, vibrant and inclusive atmosphere that encourages education.
The fair is also a melting pot of cultures across 81galleries as it is comprised of 36 percentlocal and 64 percent international galleries allowing visitors to experience a more holistic, international collective of art and culture. These galleries are comprised of over 20 different countries, including the United Kingdom, the United States, Hong Kong, Australia, Japan and Thailand among many others.
The renowned Art Fair also makes a crucial step in supporting local artists. By choosing art from Affordable Art Fair, you will be directly contributing to the contemporary art ecosystem, supporting artists’ livelihoods, alongside the galleries that champion their work. Therefore, when you purchase a ticket to the Affordable Art Fair, you get the best of both worlds. Not only do you get access to thousands of artworks all under one roof; but it’s also a chance to speak to the experts and gallerists.
"A little talk", 2020, chinese ink acrylic and gold leaf on Korean paper 60 x 60cm. JIEUN PARK
What To Consider When Purchasing Art
When collecting art, it’s good to expose yourself to industry connections and mingle with like-minded individuals to get a better grasp on up-and-coming trends, industry insights and other word-of-mouth hearsays and tips. Being on the ground, your ability to sense and indulge in the local art industry and energy gets more heightened, as opposed to appreciating it off your screen. Colours, techniques, pigments and expressions all come to life.
However, before we purchase art, it is important to understand why we are purchasing it. Would it be included as part of a decorative switch-up in your home? If so, would the piece be featured in your own private space on displayed in an open room? Style, colour, layout and dimensions are all of these are crucial components worth taking into consideration as well. Some pointers as stated by Singapore Art Fair’s Fair Director, Alan Koh are:
Measure up the space beforehand
Photograph the room and take these with you as a reminder of your décor
Check how different light could affect your chosen position
Consider if you need the artwork framed
Advice For First-Time Buyers
Research is crucial. While the Affordable Art Fair is a prejudice-free space it is important to explore your options. Once inside the space, take your time understanding the different types of artworks on offer from methods, materials, colours and sizes, perhaps even listing out a personal pick of top five or top 10 selections and why you are drawn to those pieces.
Next, always keep a budget in mind. If an artwork that catches your eye is over budget, that does not mean it is off-limits. As Koh explains, galleries might have a smaller piece by the same artist up their sleeve. Or they may offer a payment scheme to allow you to spread the cost over monthly or quarterly instalments. However, if you happen to see a work of art you fall in love with but is out of your budget, keep in mind that many galleries offer a “try before you buy” scheme. You basically borrow work to view it in situ for a specified period, before your commit to that final decision.
“LookOut”, 2022, Oil on Canvas, 60 x 50cm. HUANG ZHI YU
Art and The Artist
One of the most exciting parts of collecting contemporary art is learning about established artists or discovering rising stars. Cultural background, heritage, techniques, methods as well as inspiration and motivations are important in drawing you into a piece as these build emotional ties between a collector and the artwork. Do your research into the artist’s background. What story are they saying with their work and does it inspire you? Examine the materials—pencil, charcoal and pastel drawings are both priced and presented differently as opposed to oil paintings or a bronze sculpture for instance.
“Seafood Chowder”, 2023, mixed media on canvas display 25 x 25cm. GABBY MALPAS
Be Open To Originality
Embrace the unconventional and the original keeping in line with the realms of your own imagination and budget in mind. Art is meant to make you think, make you feel something from within. You should not buy an artwork because you think it is what you should be buying. Instead, make sure your heart and head take an equal part in your decision. Collecting art is ultimately about developing and learning to trust your taste. And the Affordable Art Fair is a great place to start.
To register and purchase your tickets for this year’s Affordable Art Fair, click here.
For more on the latest in the world of art, click here.
There are many ways to describe wine other than the palate. One could pontificate about the colour of the grape or how the light hits the glass to give that blood-red hue. You could comment about the presence of sediments or how bright it is, which speaks about the filtration process. But in a rare moment, Penfolds decided to get people talking about the label design. Cue NIGO.
Penfolds ropes in street style doyen NIGO as the brand’s inaugural creative partner. This year-long appointment will lead the creative vision for selected Penfolds projects. A veteran in the fashion, art and music world, NIGO is also a wine collector. When asked about his affiliation with Penfolds, NIGO says, “I have always loved and enjoyed wine, and Penfolds has always been one of my favourites. My creative partnership with Penfolds is a dream project. I am grateful for the opportunity.”
Merch are all sold out loh. The wines are still available.
One by Penfolds
And what is NIGO’s first labour? It’s the One by Penfolds.
One by Penfolds celebrates “oneness”. You know, that old saw about how different and unique people are and the things that bind all of us together. But that expression holds true for Penfolds as its wine is the product of diverse perspectives and regional nuances of each winemaking region.
In his signature style, NIGO designed four animal motifs for the wine labels. Like something out of an alt-Sanrio sketchbook, each animal (crocodile; rooster; panda; bear) represents the four winemaking regions where One by Penfolds wines are sourced—Australia, France, China and America. Limited-edition T-shirts and jackets, courtesy of NIGO’s own Human Made label, accompanied the global launch of One by Penfolds. Alas, those were quickly sold out. But the One by Penfolds range is still available online and at selected restaurants and bars.
I
And it came to pass that Jahan Loh needed to move to a bigger studio.
He has amassed a number of stuff over the years and his old space brimmed with relics of his past.
His new place is chaos. Half-opened boxes; sculptures in corners; framed paintings hang on walls; others are kept in storage.
Jahan forms some sense of order in a room within his studio. There, graven images of his interests can be found—Transformers, loose Star Wars figurines (many that were inherited from his cousins), Robotech model kits, comic books, artwork from his peers (SSUR, Futura, Stash), vinyl toys. Sometimes, Jahan hoards multiples of the same toy.
Many things I own are mass-produced, says Jahan.
In this age of mechanical reproduction, does it lessen the value of his hoard?
Everything sparks joy, says Jahan.
However, you will not find images of skulls. The symbolism doesn’t sit well with Jahan. Bad vibes.
The last four years when Trump was president… that has a lot of negative energy, says Jahan.
Renovations of the studio were waylaid by the pandemic for eight months.
Putting aside the inconvenience of settling in, Jahan sees the pandemic as a catalyst for the progression of technology; the digital age accelerates.
While the pandemic quickens some things, others remain constant.
The pandemic has also stoked the fires of Jahan’s hypochondria. Other than the increased vigilance for his health and hygiene, Jahan’s routine didn’t alter much. Jahan still paints. He’d enter his studio at 10.30am and work while listening to an array of music.
And Jahan now conducts his meetings, albeit online. It’s a solitary life, one that has him in the studio eight to 10 hours in the day before returning home to his wife. He eschews clubbing or attending gallery openings.
II
To understand why Jahan is what he is today, we must look back at what he was before.
Sunday mornings are filled with cartoons and children’s programmes. A lot of Woody Woodpecker and Kamen Riders.
Jahan also has a fascination with science fiction.
And Jahan has refused a career in law and scored a scholarship to the LASALLE College of the Arts.
The experience at LASALLE is as ‘terrible’. He went in with the romantic notion of learning about art but there wasn’t much of a foundation for him to draw from.
It’s like kung fu, says Jahan. If you don’t perfect your fundamentals, how will you advance in your craft?
His teachers always put him at risk of failing. Jahan took this negativity and created a piece called ‘Gone to the Dogs’.
Jahan graduated from LASALLE in 2002 and followed that with his first solo pop art show, Cherry Pop.
Ensconced in his own world; daydreaming, world-building, and all of his creation exist inside Jahan’s head. His friends refer to him spacing out as being very ‘dazed’.
Jahan was also inspired by the graffiti of Daze aka Chris Ellis.
Dazed-J would be his calling. Dazed-J would be his call sign.
By day, Jahan would serve out his scholarship bond with The Straits Times creating cartoons and infographics for the national broadsheet.
By night, Jahan and Maslan Ahmad aka Skope would go out to tag.
Soon after, Jahan broke his bond and moved to Taipei for a job offer. He’d work for Machi Entertainment and he won several Taiwanese music awards including MTV’s CD Cover Design of the Year.
Jahan would form Invasion Studios that designs album covers and direct music videos. Invasion Studios would eventually gear itself towards art and animation.
When he started as a full-fledged artist, Jahan subsisted on his own savings for the first two years. When you hit the bottom and you’re scraping on the ground, you’re still alive, says Jahan.
When you reach the lowest depths, there is no way you can sink any deeper.
Several exhibitions later, Jahan is still painting.
Death comes to all of us, that is the first truth. In understanding that first truth, why would you toil at the things you do not want to do? That is the second truth.
With an understanding, Jahan continues making art. He endures.
III
Jahan shows me an image he’s been working on: a study in momentum.
Using a 3D programme, Jahan divided the simple motion of running into progressive phases and spliced them together. The result is his iconic spaceman, with his many arms and legs.
My friends think this is my subconscious telling me that I’m running out of time but it’s actually capturing time, prolonging time, says Jahan.
This ties in with his contemplation of humanity’s fate. Recently revisited for Intergalactic Dreams exhibition in 2019, the spaceman character was first conceptualised for the Collision in 2004 with New York-based graffiti artist Crash.
A year before the show when Jahan was still based in Taiwan, he read that the country produced enough PET bottles that can encircle the earth.
With that rate of consumption, the earth is screwed, thought Jahan. If the earth is done for, then there is no other recourse than to migrate to another planet.
And Jahan created the spaceman and saw that it was good; this creation who sets forth for the stars to search for a new earth.
Seven years later, the threat of climate change starts to show its teeth: icebergs break off from the Antarctic ice shelf; the extinction rate for floral and fauna climbs a thousand times higher than the natural baseline; extreme weathers are now commonplace.
I have seen the Future, says Jahan. There is no Planet B.
We all live in the present. We never really look to the past or paid too much attention to the future, says Jahan.
His words hold echoes of George Santayana’s immortal phrase: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Jahan points out that mankind has rebooted times before. The great civilisations of Egypt or the Mayan empire; these pinnacles of human culture that are easily eradicated.
IV
The last time he illegally painted was in 2005.
Graffiti quickens Jahan’s soul. The rush of blood in his head, the pulse of adrenaline. There is a thrill into doing things you’re not supposed to do.
When Jahan tags a building in Club Street, he ‘owns’ it. That’s his. That’s how you lay claim to a structure that you don’t own at all.
At the time, Jahan was based in Taipei and ever so often he would swing by Hong Kong for a sojourn. One evening, swimming in the afterglow of alcohol he had drunk earlier, Jahan, to his delight, found paint leftover from an event.
Near a junction at Harbour City in Tsim Sha Tsui, Jahan ran up to a concrete sloping planter and painted a mini-throw-up. With no stencils nor lookout, it was a quick execution in the 24-hour surveilled city.
Jahan saw what he had made and it was good. But lo, Hong Kong’s finest spotted him. Jahan dropped the spray can and hoofed it. Even with his tag visible for all to see, the Hong Kong authorities never arrested him.
It was an experience to be lauded. The art of getting up is never getting down, says Jahan.
But Jahan sees it as a sign of his times, to walk the straight and narrow path. These days, street art is commodified. That’s the way it is. Street art is cool but it’s not graffiti.
People commission Jahan to put his art on the wall.
The form is the same but the essence is different. What was once a rebellious art form is now struck dead after 9/11. When the towers collapse, the many Argus eyes of surveillance arose.
I have this idea that I’m a tiger in an urban jungle, says Jahan. Now, he feels that he’s a circus tiger; trapped behind gold bars and only let out to entertain.
Alas, it is not as fun but that’s part of life. Graffiti, street art… they are never permanent. They will fade along with the seasons until the walls crumble down.
V
Identity is a mercurial beast that forms according to its environment.
After returning to Singapore (from Taiwan), the Esplanade asked if he could create a solo show about identity.
In his time in Taiwan, many of their local press assumed Jahan is Taiwanese. Jahan wondered how he can talk about his Chinese-Singaporean identity to a global audience.
For his exhibition Cherry Poke: Reconstituted Philosophies, Jahan took the object of his childhood obsession—a can of Ma Ling luncheon meat—and painted it.
In 2001, Jahan sojourned in New York to meet with Jakuan Melendez from 360 Toy Group.
Now, there was a man named True that Jakuan introduced Jahan to. This man asked Jahan about his graffiti style and he showed it to him on his smartphone.
True saw that it was good but knew it could be better. He said unto Jahan, you’re Chinese but why do you write like a kid from the Bronx?
And Jahan wondered who was True to tell him what to write. Jakuan pulled Jahan aside and said unto him, that the man he spoke to, True is Phase 2.
Sing forth the glory of his name: Phase 2 who created the style of graffiti writing called bubble letter or softie; Phase 2 who pioneered the use of arrows in graffiti; Phase 2 who elevated the art form, his work turning into ‘hieroglyphical calligraphic abstraction’.
And Jahan reflected on what True had said. He started to hold his paintbrush in the Chinese mao bi style. He veered from writing in English to crafting his wildstyle in Mandarin. Jahan does not know if he started Chinese wildstyle but he is now known for that look.
You can see Jahan’s Chinese name in his inimitable style. For two years Jahan laboured to translate his wildstyle into a 3D sculpture; his name buried in the complexity of the strokes.
VI
Jahan’s visions were something to behold. When he read about the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, he sees them like Akira on his motorbike, riders on iron horses. The Chinese folklore of a shen xian (‘deity’ in Mandarin) rising from the belly of the dragon can be interpreted as a spaceship’s hold opening up for TIE fighters to emerge from.
It is how people back in the old days would perceive things. They see a smartphone and they draw from their own frame of references. This is a box, they say, behold, it lights with the glory and speaks with tongues of angels.
Is it unfathomable then that when Elijah was taken up in a chariot of fire or when the shepherds were visited by throngs of angels, that these visitors were the unidentifiable extraterrestrial sorts?
That is what inspired Jahan to create his spaceship when he saw a mural painted in the 11th century in Georgia’s Svetitskhoveli Cathedral. He believes that divinity is extraterrestrial, that Jesus and the heavenly hosts are intergalactic visitors.
If there is divine salvation, it would be found in the outer reaches of space. Alas, like the rest of us, Jahan is grounded. Merciless gravity anchoring him to terra firma.
Five years ago, Jahan visually translated the Book of Genesis (before Adam and Eve’s expulsion) into an exhibition called Genesis: God’s Terrarium. Jahan sees the earth as a biodome and Adam and Eve as the start to God’s experiment.
Origin myths are similar across cultures: a sacred force establishes order and reality into existence.
The primordial Pangu separated the heaven and the earth, his body became the mountains and rivers; Raven released the first humans from a cockle shell and stole the sun, moon and stars and hung them in the sky; knowing that He’s unable to create the earth on by Himself, God worked with the Devil. [sic]
Jahan’s messages are left open to interpretation. Even if the viewers miss the point with his message, he’d like to hear different points of view about his work.
VII
The first heaven and the first earth had passed away. And, in its place, a new heaven and a new earth.
And our descendants were fruitful and multiply. They progress while the memory of their forebears lessens with each generation.
One day, they will uncover relics from our present. They will be pored over.
Our iPads, will they think it is our sacred tablets? Our Star Wars figurines, will they assume that it is our idols? Our magazines, will they read the text and think of them as holy writ?
And what will they make of Jahan’s work then?
What will be the takeaway when his sculpture is pulled from the ground and the dirt is dusted off its body?