Kopi Culture

16 May 2015 – 30 June 2015


The Coffee Shop Series, a solo exhibition by Tan Ping Chiang (陈彬章) a testament and homage to an authentic Nanyang (Southeast Asian) coffee shop culture, containing within it the rich tapestry of stories and lives that ebb and flow with the changing times. Characteristically imbuing social realism with formalist experimentation, the artist presents a heartfelt ode to this microcosm of Singapore society.

For Tan, the flavour and poetry of everyday Singapore life are most potently embodied in the coffee-aroma-infused neighbourhood coffee shop or kopitiam. Like the strongly aromatic Nanyang coffee that it serves, the Kopitiam brews a rich, flavoursome setting for the multiracial, multilingual city-state’s bustling theatre of life, with its proprietors, servers, and patrons as its players. Seen through the eyes of ‘Uncle Ping,’ this piquant melting pot moves to the rojak rhythms of different languages and dialects of people from all walks of life who converge here, often accompanied by a cup of strong local coffee (“kopi gao-gao”) or “teh si siewdai”.

The unsung heroes featured in these scenes are the hardworking kopi assistants, often ‘pioneer generation’ elderly servers doubling as cleaners despite their age and frailty, exercising their memory and mobility incessantly as they holler out orders of dialect-customised beverages: this one a siew dai, that one a kosong, making sure to si this and gao that, not forgetting that another has to be poh-poh – as if reciting modern poetry.

The intense aroma of a kopi gao-gao infuses this culture and philosophy of coffee: an ease and grace of being in the world that frees the mind to such autumnal reflections and ruminations, the remembrance of things and times past and the vicissitudes of a life well-lived, and to musings and meditations on the self, on life, and ever-changing society.

Tan Ping Chiang is an esteemed Singapore artist and educator with an art and design career spanning the early 1960s to the present. A member of the Modern Art Society in the 1960s, Tan is often cited as a pioneer artist who had helped foment formalist experimentation in Singapore art. Notable exhibitions include the 1964 International Youth Art Exhibition in Shinjuku, Japan, and the 1969 Salon d'Automne art exhibition in Paris, France, as well as the Solid, Soft, Dynamic: Three-Man Exhibition at the National Museum Art Gallery, Singapore in 1990. His works can be found in major public and private collections globally, including the National Museum Art Gallery of Singapore and the National Museum of Malaysia.