Untitled Edition: Curated by Robert Zhao Renhui
VENUE
Shop–House by DECK
4 & 6 Lorong 24 Geylang, Singapore 398616
ADMISSION
Free Admission
By Appointment Only | Email clara@deck.sg for Registration
About
DECK has spent the past decade championing the voices of young artists fresh out of art school, giving them a space to explore, question, and redefine the language of photography and the moving image. Now, for the first time, these diverse and daring perspectives are brought together in a singular, collectible form.
This is not just a box of prints. It’s a time capsule of a new generation. It’s an investment in future talent, and a statement that arts in Singapore matter.
Support
Every dollar raised from this exhibition will directly fund the construction of DECK’s permanent build at Prinsep in 2028, and support our annual programming. By acquiring a piece of art, you are helping us build a sustainable future for photography arts in Singapore, ensuring DECK can continue our mission for years to come.
View the Collection
The exhibition is now available for viewing at Shop–House by DECK. To experience the works in person, please schedule an appointment via email to clara@deck.sg
The Giving Guide (E-Brochure)
Explore the full collection of works and learn more about the artists by viewing The Giving Guide.
Featuring
Robert Zhao Renhui
Curator
Robert Zhao Renhui (b. 1983, Singapore) is an interdisciplinary artist who explores the complex and co-mingled relationships between nature and culture. Working in installation, photography, video and sculpture, Zhao is interested in the multifarious beings and objects that constitute the living world, and whose experiences and knowledge enrich our collective existence.
Zhao held solo exhibitions The Forest Institute (2022) at Gillman Barracks, Singapore and Monuments in the Forest at ShanghART Gallery (2023) in Shanghai. His latest work is a performance installation titled Albizia (2023), commissioned by the Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay. He has also been featured in 10th Busan Biennale (2020), 6th Singapore Biennale (2019), 9th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (2018), 11th Taipei Biennale (2018), 17th Jakarta Biennale (2017), and 20th Biennale of Sydney (2016). Zhao represented Singapore in the 60th Venice Biennale. (2024)
He received the prestigious National Arts Council Young Artist Award (2010), Singapore’s highest award for young arts practitioners aged 35 and below, He was also a finalist of the Hugo Boss Asia Art Award (2017).
Cheryl Yip
Artist
Cheryl Louise Yip (b. 1998) is a visual artist based in Singapore. She works with photography and moving images to explore grief, memory and rituals. Informed by lived experience and universal truths, her practice seeks to visualise the intangible through conceptual approaches, merging traditional processes with contemporary ideas while emphasizing the photographic object, process, and encounter. Her works have been exhibited internationally in Singapore, South Korea, and China, and she has received recognition including the Kwek Leng Joo Prize of Excellence in Photography (2023) as well as awards at the Singapore International Photography Festival and the Hangzhou Biennale.
Isa Pengskul
Artist
Isa Pengskul works across a range of media to challenge conventional models of thinking about nature, culture and the human/non-human dichotomy. Central to Isa’s concept-driven practice is the critical awareness of the human position—embedded within and constantly shaped by their surroundings.
Joshua Kon
Artist
Kon Fu Shan Joshua (b. 1997, Singapore) became an artist after learning he’d have to study literature under a particularly fierce teacher. After abandoning the literary arts, he realized he had no aptitude for other fields and opted to study art instead.
He enjoys exploring how established systems of power can shape the world at an intimate level. His approach includes satire and humor to expose flaws and limitations, and to reveal to audiences that nothing is truly unquestionable.
Michelle Tan
Artist
Michelle Tan (b. 2000, Singapore) is a visual artist whose work incorporates elements of nature, fantasy, and cinema. Through experimentation with composition and colour, her work explores the idea of escapism by capturing the mundane reality and twisting it into her own interpretation of a blissful utopia, offering viewers a window into another world and a moment of respite.
Ryan Lim Zi Yi
Artist
Ryan Lim Zi Yi (b. 1996, Singapore) explores the quiet rhythms of the unspectacular through his installations of images, sculpture, and text. His practice draws from moments and encounters, what lingers in the background of public and private spaces. Working with ordinary materials and subtle gestures, he reconfigures these traces into narratives and forms that feel both familiar and distant, revealing the unnoticed as tender, uncertain, and worth remembering.
His works have been exhibited internationally, including at Carp Gallery (Taiwan), Plague Space (Russia), and LivingRoom (Netherlands); and in Singapore with Whitestone Gallery, Temporary Unit, DECK, I_S_L_A_N_D_S, Comma Space, Objectifs.
Victoria Tan
Artist
Victoria Tan’s practice oscillates between contemporary art, graphic design and printmaking. Her current areas of research focus on construction and the nature of reality, engaging multidisciplinary techniques including theory and new ways of seeing
Amelia Yuliana (Leia)
Artist
Amelia Yuliana is an artist who weaves themes of faith and selfhood. Her work usually deals with moving images and the quiet intimacy of film photography, thus dwelling in the in-between—where emotion meets image, and memory becomes material.
For Amelia, photography is not merely an act of seeing—it is a feeling, a conversation, a question left open. Each piece is an offering: a moment suspended, a story unfolding, an invitation to reflect, respond, and reimagine. Through her lens, she encourages her viewers to have a conversation in the spaces between the frames.
John Marie Andrada
Artist
Based in Singapore, John Marie Andrada (b. 2001, Philippines) is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice blends figuration and abstraction, driven by an intuitive and experimental approach to image-making. Growing up and taking root in a once foreign country, she moves between mediums and draws from personal recounts to reflect on the complexities of identity, time and the human experience. She graduated with a BA in Fine Arts (First Class Honours) in 2023 and debuted her first Solo with Haridas Contemporary in 2024. Her works have also been featured in China, Istanbul, Japan and Korea.
Andrea Danker
Artist
Andrea Danker (b.1996) is a Singapore-based visual artist from Malaysia. Her practice navigates states of transit and processes of mending to reimagine how identity is shaped through time and space. Through painting, installation and drawing, she engages storytelling as a tool to bridge personal experience with wider cultural and social histories.
She graduated with a BA(Hons) in Fine Arts first class from LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore. She has participated in group exhibitions including Undescribed #8, 2023 under DECK Singapore and Across Narrow Waters, as part of The Substation’s Septfest 2022. She was nominated for the International Takifuji Art Award in 2021 and was awarded the Winston Oh Travelogue Award in 2022.
Angelica Ong
Artist
Angelica is a Singaporean artist working primarily in photography and artist books. Her practice focuses on time and its indexes, language, materiality, and slow art. How is time felt and experienced, and how does one express its passage as simultaneously cosmic and human in scale? Angelica often seeks images in nature and the everyday to intertwine intimate, daily occurrences with the vast and larger cycles that govern the universe. She also merges her images with words that heighten one’s awareness and understanding of the micromovements of time’s passing and nature’s minute gestures—monumentality in minutiae.
Toni Cuhardi
Artist
Toni took interest in the transitory aspect of life and this led him to capture the in-between, be it the the temporary visits or the observations from the awkward pauses in life. The theme of “overthinking the mundane” became one of his pillars in photography and his projects started out from simple questions of everyday encounters. Why was the light turned on during the day? Why was one path taken more than the others? These insignificant questions guide his observation and materialize photographs that depicts scenes that sat in between speculation and reality.
Luna Chang
Artist
Luna Chang (b. 2001) is an image-based artist working across themes of identity, gender, and urban practices. Their current practice encompasses care and agency through experimental modes of presenting photography. Luna has exhibited at Floating Projects, Art Outreach, DECK, and Objectifs Centre, and was awarded the Winston Oh Travelogue Award in 2024.
Luna is a MA Global Cultural and Creative Industries student at SOAS and a BA (Hons) Fine Arts graduate from LASALLE (2024). Having worked with SIPF, Singapore Art Museum, Gagosian, Art Outreach, and the Singapore Pavilion at Venice Biennale 2024, they bring experience in exhibition management and programming.
Genevieve Leong
Artist
Genevieve Leong (b. 1992, Singapore) completed her BA Fine Art (Photography & Digital Imaging) at Nanyang Technological University, School of Art, Design & Media, Singapore, in 2015, and her MA Contemporary Art Practice (Critical Practice) at the Royal College of Art, London, in 2019. She was based in Switzerland from August 2019–March 2023 and relocated back to Singapore in April 2023.
Her art practice attempts to visualise the intangible. Beginning with the immaterial, her work often combines text, image, found and made objects and the manipulation of space to create what she describes as “an almost physical image”. The installations that she creates often embody an impermanence with possibilities for change, whether it be due to audience participation or natural environmental factors. Her work seeks to shed new light onto her emotions, sensations, and realisations.
Hong Shu-ying
Artist
Hong Shu-ying 方舒颖 (b.1997, Singapore) collects and reframes found images and materials to produce books, moving images and other printed matter. Her works explore informal archives—such as annotated musical scores and amateur videos—reflecting on alternative knowledge systems. She values everyday expressions of creativity, inspired by amateur Chinese orchestras and internet user-generated media.
Beyond her artistic practice, Shu develops projects that expand the possibilities of exhibition-making and encounters with art and books outside of purpose-built spaces. She is also one half of the collective Part Time Book Club, alongside Mingli Seet—exploring ways of sharing and discovering (art) books.
Quinn Lum
Artist
Quinn Lum Fu Loong (b.1993, Singapore) is a visual artist working across photography, moving image, and performance. A graduate of the School of Art, Design and Media, Nanyang Technological University (BFA Hons, 2018), his practice explores personal transformation, spirituality, and the unseen.
Drawing from Process Work, shamanic cosmology, and healing practices, Quinn explores art as a conduit for energetic transmission, space-holding, and witnessing. His work positions the artist as medium—one who channels, translates, and facilitates healing through the act of creation.
Rooted in autoethnography, his earlier practice examined social conditioning within a result-driven family. This inquiry has since expanded into spiritual realms, where he explores how personal healing mediates the tension between trauma and self.
He has exhibited in group shows such as the 9th Singapore International Photography Festival Open Call (2024) and Rewritten: The World Ahead of Us (2021). His awards include the Dominie Book Prize (SIPF Photobook Open Call, 2018), Second Prize in the NTU International Photography Awards (2017), and the Most Promising Young Artist Award (UOB Painting of the Year, 2010).
Sarah Noorhimli
Artist
Sarah Noorhimli (b. Singapore, 2001) is an artist and cultural worker. She is particularly interested in images and the moving image, motivated by the temporality of the human body in an environment of rapid urbanisation.
She recently received her Bachelor of Fine Arts (First Class Honours) from LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore in 2024, of which she has exhibited and curated under extensively. She was a recipient of the Winston Oh Travelogue Award (2024) and the OFF-THE-WALL Award (2025), where she exhibited in Milan, Italy.
Sean Cham
Artist
Sean Cham is a London-based Singaporean artist and historian who works at the intersections of photography, performance, and site-specific installation. His practice is concerned with personal and institutional histories. He has a PhD in History of Art from Birkbeck, University of London in collaboration with London’s National Gallery. Cham’s works have been exhibited in Ethiopia, Germany, Singapore, South Korea, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. His works had been commissioned by Singapore Art Museum, Singapore Fringe Festival, The Future of Our Pasts Festival, and NUS Centre For the Arts. He was a winner of LensCulture Critics’ Choice Award 2025 and shortlisted for 166th International Photography Exhibition Award.
Adar Ng and Dave Lim
Artists
Adar Ng and Dave Lim are a artist and filmmaker duo that we have worked together since 2018 through multiple artistic, curatorial and research projects. Their notable projects include At Home with Work (2025), The Spaces Between Us (2021) and ON/OFF/SCREEN 2021, a moving image exhibition. Collectively, their work has travelled internationally in film festivals and exhibitions such as Busan International Video Art Festival and Athens Digital Arts Festival. Their artistic concerns circle around the quotidian visual poetry of life, the need to bear witness and an insatiable questioning of social paradigms.
Cynthia Delaney Suwito
Artist
Cynthia Delaney Suwito is a visual artist who explores the theme of everyday objects and experiences. Using them as both her theme and material, she uses observational humour to explore daily phenomena. Her work takes varied forms, many of which are site specific, interactive sculptures and installations.
Born in Indonesia and based in Singapore, Cynthia completed her Bachelor in Fine Arts at LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore. Cynthia was featured on BBC Asia, and was in the 2017 FORBES 30 under 30 Asia in the Arts. other than Singapore, Cynthia has exhibited in Jakarta, Bandung and Taipei.
Ernest Wu
Artist
Ernest Wu (b.1991) is a Singapore-based visual artist whose practice redefines photography through experimental image-making, shaped by painting and technology. Transforming the camera into a meditative tool, his work contemplates existence, mortality, and the human condition. His works have been exhibited internationally in Auckland, Dali, Paris, Tokyo, and Singapore. In 2018 Wu received the Kwek Leng Joo Prize of Excellence in Photography.
Jonathan Liu
Artist
Jonathan Liu is a visual artist and educator. He is interested in the way our process of recollection deteriorates, decays and disappears over time. His work explores the evolving relationship between the Human and the Nonhuman, as well as to dissolve and entangle the boundaries between objective photographic forms and subjective experiences.
By manipulating photographic mediums and experimenting with machine learning, he questions photography’s materiality and its relationship with technology. Through his representation and fragmentation of the landscape, he is interested to show the fallibility of the process of recollection as well as the search for the romantic sublime within.
Lai Yu Tong
Artist
Lai Yu Tong is an artist from Singapore who works across drawing, image-making, sculpture and sound. Through his practice, he is interested in creating adequate media to articulate the present, believing in the intrinsic need for humans to make images and tell stories. Recent works of his consider how art can evoke empathy in a world so damaged.
Yen Yun Ni, Odelia
Artist
Odelia Yen is a community-focused visual artist and entrepreneur dedicated to creating impactful artistic experiences. She co-founded Project Blue, fostering creative and therapeutic engagements through workshops.
Beyond Project Blue, her works were showcased at the National Library Board, Drawing Etc., DECK, Institute of Contemporary Arts, Alliance Française, ULTRASUPERNEW Gallery and contributed to NTU’s Mental Health Week and Singapore Mental Health Film Festival. Prior to her works, she designed a logo for the Ministry of Health and illustrated for Thieme. Odelia also delivered talks that shared the joy and relevance of art in everyday life.
Ivan Ong
Artist
Ivan Ong (b.1994) is a Singaporean artist who documents his relationship with the everyday. His photographs vary in tones, gradually moving from corridor spaces to looking at interactions and installations within the city. Through his practice, he hopes to push for the convergence of the imaginary in the midst of reality.
Lim Zeherng
Artist
Lim Zeherng is a visual artist based in Singapore, whose practice reflects on the existential concerns of the human condition. Fascinated by notions of time, loss, and memory, he works fluidly across photography, video, and installation to create devices of remembrance—personal attempts to hold on to fleeting moments and resist the inevitability of forgetting.
Marvin Tang
Artist
Marvin Tang (b.1989) is a Singaporean artist who uses images as a tool of investigation.
His research questions the linearity of historical narratives and the notion of collective identities. His works stem from the effects of policy-making to shifting social structures. He is particularly interested in applying this research to Singapore, attempting to investigate its historical account and relationship to her expanded narratives across the globe.
Renee Yeo
Artist
Renee Yeo (b. 1999) is a multi-disciplinary artist based in Singapore. Her work explores cultural hybridity, identity, and belonging through personal memory and collective heritage. Notable projects include My Ah Gong is Kinmenese (2024), a research film selected for the 2025 Kuala Lumpur International Film Academy Awards. Spanning installation, photography, and film, Renee’s practice reflects on how identities shift over time. Recurring themes of family and cultural lineage form the backbone of her work, inviting viewers into a dialogue on the fluid and evolving nature of identity within broader social and historical contexts.
Ryan Benjamin Lee
Artist
Ryan Benjamin Lee (b.1997) is an artist-animator from Singapore. His works playfully balance between spectacle and demystification, propaganda and cynicism. His iconoclastic use of printed material, particularly found images, photographs and books, are intertwined with drawn animation and reimagined as an abstract world refracting in multiple directions.
Tan Wei
Artist
Tan Wei (Singapore, b. 1997) is a curator and visual artist who works spatially across a diverse breadth of medium and depth. Rooted in storytelling, her practice delves into the fundamental constructs of reality and being, drawing from ordinary moments in everyday life. By reconstructing her observations, she invites audiences into a “theatre of the mind” to contemplate their own experiences and how they relate to others. Ultimately, she hopes to utilise art to break down barriers, creating works that resonate deeply with the audience and prompt them to reflect on the synchronicity, or lack thereof, within their otherwise mundane living experiences.