Revamped Malay Heritage Centre galleries invite visitors to ponder what heritage they will pass down

Revamped Malay Heritage Centre galleries invite visitors to ponder what heritage they will pass down


SINGAPORE – Several wayang kulit (shadow puppet) displays hang from the ceiling of a stairwell at the Malay Heritage Centre (MHC), each bearing costumes and facial features typical of puppets used in the centuries-old Javanese art form.

It takes a trained eye to know that the puppets on display, made by Singaporean artist Tumadi Patri, are a reinterpretation of the traditional puppets, which are usually decorated on only one side and made with paper or leather.

Tumadi’s puppets are acrylic-based and decorated on both sides – allowing them to function not just for wayang kulit performances but also as art pieces that can be admired from multiple angles.

Referencing the puppets and Tumadi’s Javanese heritage, Ms Syafiqah Jaaffar, MHC assistant curator, said: “He sees it actually as his interpretation and continuation or reinvention of his heritage.”

That act of inheriting, interpreting and possibly reinventing heritage is what Ms Syafiqah said the MHC wants visitors to ponder as they spend time in the centre’s revamped permanent galleries, which will reopen to the public on April 25 after it was closed in 2022 for restoration works.

The Malay Heritage Centre will reopen to the public on April 25.

ST PHOTO: AZMI ATHNI

“What heritage do you want to carry with us? What heritage do you want to reinvent? What heritage do you want to create anew? These questions really sum up our understanding of heritage,” said Ms Syafiqah at a media preview of the revamped galleries on April 22.

She added that heritage has a temporal element to it, and is not just about what this generation inherits but also about what is created and passed down to future generations.

For Ms Syafiqah, the centre’s fourth gallery – one of six in the MHC and which focuses on the changing visibility and roles of Malay women in the 1950s and 1960s – best conveys the theme of inheritance and change.

In the gallery are several outfits, including a black songket shift dress with an evening jacket, that showcase traditional Malay fabrics adapted to a Western silhouette.

The centre’s fourth gallery focuses on the changing visibility and roles of Malay women in the 1950s and 1960s.

ST PHOTO: AZMI ATHNI

There are also kebaya moden – versions of the traditional outfit that have a shorter cut – which Ms Syafiqah said emerged in the mid-20th century in part because of the influence of Western fashion houses.



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