Sunday, December 22, 2013

 

Wan Qing Yuan 晚晴园 (aka Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall)

 www.wanqingyuan.org.sg   19Dec2013

A beautiful, elegant two-storey Victorian villa built in the colonial era in 1880s.  It was originally built by a businessman for his mistress and later bought by another businessman (Teo Eng Hock 张永福) for his aged mother. The villa was renamed 晚晴园 Serene Sunset Garden. In 1906, Teo Eng Hock offered the villa to Sun Yat Sen 孙中山 who used it as a base for Tong Meng Hui 同盟会.  Tong Meng Hui was an anti-Qing Dynasty revolutionary movement in 1900s and Teo Eng Hock was a keen supporter. In 1937, six men (including philanthropist Lee Kong Chian 李光) helped saved the villa which was in a dilapidated states due to years of neglect. Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce subsequently bought over the villa and Wan Qing Yuan is now a museum. At Wan Qing Yuan, we could see photographs, artefacts and paintings which trace the story of Sun Yat Sen and the contributions of Chinese communities in Southeast Asia to the revolution.
 
In 1900s, many local Teochew Chinese in Singapore (including Teo Eng Hock, Lim Nee Soon) were actively supporting the revolution via fund raising, rescuing revolutionaries detained by authority and even volunteering to fight on the frontlines in the 1907 Chaozhou Uprising, one of several uprisings organised by Tong Meng Hui.

Located in the lush garden, is a sculpture commemorating Nan Qiao Ji Gong 南侨机工. Nan Qiao Ji Gong refers to the more than 3,200 overseas volunteer drivers and mechanics including non-Chinese from Southeast Asia who had responded to call to support China’s wartime efforts against the Japanese between 1939 and 1942.  The Marco Polo Bridge Incident (卢沟桥事变 aka 七七事变) was a battle between China and Japan, often used as the marker for the start of the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945).

After touring the museum, I feel proud to be part of the Teochew Chinese community in Singapore, to have the grand villa to enjoy and proud of the camaraderie and unity of people in Southeast Asia to uphold justice & peace.

Monday, December 02, 2013

 

Oi! 油街实现


Oi! 油街实现  http://www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/APO/en_US/web/apo/about_oi.html

While walking along Electric Road, Hong Kong on a Friday in November, I was drawn to a quaint and colonial style building. Curiosity got the better of me and I decided to check out the building at 12 Oil Street. It turned out to be the premises of the former Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club – a building with 105 years of history. It is now an art space, an incubator for art.

Oi! is like an Oasis on the bustling HK Island – tranquillity, friendly staff and interesting art display await visitors.  

Sip a cup of free herbal drink at I’MPERFECT café - ponder the maxim “It's ok to be imperfect 擁抱不完美” and appreciate our own imperfection. Check out the I’mperfect Barter (herb pot and food exchange) on Thursdays and various ad-hoc workshops. https://www.facebook.com/imperfectX

Among the many art displays, I found curator Gum Cheng’s “After One Hundred” insightful – a project to document the changes in and around Oi! over a two-year time frame. There are at least three possible outcomes in terms of perspectives: 1. To move forwards; 2. To fall backwards; 3. To remain the same.   It inspires me to name my break project “After One Hundred”.

Thanks Guide Fun & Fung for an enjoyable afternoon at Oi!


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