National Gallery Singapore is Asia’s first Healing Arts Centre of Excellence

National Gallery Singapore is Asia’s first Healing Arts Centre of Excellence


SINGAPORE – The National Gallery Singapore has been designated as Asia’s inaugural Healing Arts Centre of Excellence by the Jameel Arts & Health Lab, which is a global initiative set up in 2023 with the support of the World Health Organization (WHO).

It joins famed concert venue Carnegie Hall in New York City and the Scottish Ballet – Scotland’s national dance company – in holding the appointment, in a sign that museums can play a vital role in supporting health and well-being.

Ms Alicia Teng, the gallery’s deputy director of community and access, said the designation positions the National Gallery Singapore as an anchor institution in the country’s growing arts-and-health ecosystem. 

The gallery was picked as it makes use of art as a tool that supports emotional well-being, strengthens community bonds, and makes the museum more inclusive for people of all ages and backgrounds. Among its offerings is a calm room that was launched in June 2022 for visitors with sensory needs.

Its appointment, which took place on Dec 8, signals the start of a multi-year undertaking in Singapore that aims to demonstrate the positive effect of the arts on public health in the country, Mr Stephen Stapleton, the lab’s founding co-director, told The Straits Times.

The collaboration starts with Healing Arts Singapore, a nationwide initiative that is part of the lab’s Healing Arts initiative that aims to embed the arts within systems of care and advance evidence-based programmes that can be scaled across nations to improve health and well-being.

The Jameel Arts & Health Lab was co-founded in 2023 by the WHO regional office for Europe, the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development at New York University, Saudi Arabia-based philanthropic organisation Community Jameel and British social enterprise Culturunners, which is headed by Mr Stapleton.

He said that while billions, maybe trillions, of dollars were being funnelled into pharmaceuticals and biomedicine during the Covid-19 pandemic, “many of us noticed the role that art was playing for our own sanity and mental health… to help us stay connected with ourselves”.

The lab then started the Healing Arts campaign to challenge the separation between the science community, the arts community and the policy community, he said at the Dec 8 event held at the National Gallery Singapore.



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