The Intercultural Theatre Institute (ITI) is naming a chair after real estate company OUE's executive chairman Stephen Riady, who donated $1 million to the performing arts school.
The Stephen Riady Master Chair in Beijing Opera is the first named chair in performing arts in Singapore and it is an acknowledgement of the largest donation from an individual donor to an independent arts organisation in Singapore.
The National Arts Council said it has no records of an individual donor gifting this amount to a small arts organisation since it started tracking donations for its Patron of the Arts award in 1983.
Dr Riady, 59, said in a statement: "The performing arts play a vital role in fostering creativity and building appreciation for a country's culture. Over the years, ITI has played a unique role in training contemporary theatre artists that draw on Asian traditional art forms and I am pleased to support their efforts.
"I hope this gift will contribute to the development of Singapore's arts and cultural sector and the broader community."
The gift, with dollar-for-dollar matching from the Government's Cultural Matching Fund, means ITI will receive a $2 million windfall. The institute's co-founder and director Thirunalan Sasitharan, 61, said in a statement: "This level of support for arts education is most significant and means the world to ITI."
ITI chairman Arun Mahizhnan added: "Dr Riady's gift will have a transformative impact on not just ITI. It will also send a strong signal that arts and culture is vital to our community and society at large, especially in these times."
Since the institute was founded in 2000 by late theatre doyen Kuo Pao Kun and Sasitharan, some 64 theatre practitioners from 17 countries have undergone its three-year practice-based, professional actor trainingRead More – Source