The commencement of the Hungry Ghost Festival means a resurgence of ghost stories and what's more exciting than exchanging tales about supposedly 'haunted' places in Singapore? One may assume that only cemeteries and abandoned places are hotbeds for supernatural activities, but surprisingly, some spooky places in Singapore may be right under your nose. Would you believe us if we told.
One may assume that only cemeteries and abandoned places are hotbeds for supernatural activities, but surprisingly, some spooky places in Singapore may be right under your nose. Would you believe us if we told you that an old haunted house now serves as a clubhouse for condominium residents? Or that your favourite jogging route at MacRitchie Reservoir may have been.
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Prizewinner Sally Simpson with her work “Fragile Equilibrium”. Photo: Cassandra Miller.
ARTIST Sally Simpson was the big winner last night (May 27) when Queanbeyan-Palerang Regional Council hosted the 2021 QPRC Art Awards at The Q Exhibition Space.
Simpson won the QPRC Acquisitive Art Award of $5,000 for her sculptural installation, “Fragile Equilibrium”, made of waxed animal bones, copper, steel and thread, which the artist says speaks to her of “loss, transformation and our uneasy relationship with the natural environment”.
A graduate of South Australian School of Art, Sydney College of Fine Arts, and the then ANU School of Art, she now lives on a small farm in this region. Her sculptures refer to totems, crosses, trees and grave markers and signify the sacred, symbolic and emblematic forms humans have used to express reverence and invoke awe and mystery.
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