SINGAPORE – Take a walk down Prinsep Street and you might notice a stack of shipping containers nestled between two nondescript buildings.

This hip photography space known as Deck sailed onto the scene six years ago, and has since then organised the Singapore International Photography Festival, as well as more than 350 workshops and exhibitions with acclaimed artists such as Robert Zhao, Chou Ching-Hui, Nobuyoshi Araki and Daido Moriyama.

None of this could have happened without help from the community. Years ago, when the area was a plot of empty land, individuals and companies chipped in with money and help in kind.

Laud Architects designed the building pro bono, out of 20 used shipping containers donated by Pacific International Lines.

Bok Seng Group helped with logistics, and construction firm Tong Hai Yang sponsored the toilets.

The lights came from local electronics firm Aztech, and City Developments Limited and Hong Leong Foundation donated cash.

Most of the second-floor library's 4,200 books are from local and overseas donors. Deck co-founders Gwen Lee and Jay Lau – who were part of the team behind 2902 Gallery at the now-defunct Old School arts enclave in Mount Sophia – dug into their own pockets too.

"When we embraced this piece of land, there was no electricity, no water, no sewage (system). We had to bring in the electricity, the water, and build up the toilets, everything, from scratch," recalls Ms Lee, 44, who is Deck's artistic director.

Today, there is a sense of deja vu in the air: Another major fund-raising and building project is under way.

In March next year, Deck's container structure will be demolished to make way for a $2.8 million permanent building of brick, mortar and steel.

The new two-storey centre – to take up 1,400 sq m – will be three times the size of the old one, with a design that pays homage to its origins.

Facilities include a larger main gallery, a library and research centre (including an artist studio and reading room), and a multi-purpose black box that doubles as a dark room.

A media gallery will showcase forms of new media art such as digital sound art and virtual reality and moving image installations.

The new building will be ready by late next year, with Lego-style prefabricated construction speeding up the process.

The decision to build a permanent space came about after Deck – which had held the parcel of land on a series of two-year leases – managed to secure a much longer lease.

"A lot of people might ask, why not check out possible spaces you can rent from the National Arts Council, or work with existing industrial buildings?" says Lee.

But this would mean moving, and they want Deck to sink its roots deep into the neighbourhood.

The centre's location, after all, is highly strategic – between Lasalle College of the Arts and Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, and across the road from Singapore Management University's student quarters.

"People recognise us as being on Prinsep Street. We want to build on it, deepen our roots, and get people to know that this organisation is going to grow with them.

"Perhaps undergraduates from the art schools, when they graduate, can pitch their works at Deck. Later on, as they grow, they can hold their mid-career showcases here."

Deck's current shipping container space will be demolished next year. ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG

This month, Deck has launched a year-long campaign on Giving.sg to raise $500,000 from the public.

Donations will be matched dollar for dollar by the National Arts Council's (NAC) Cultural Matching Fund.

Deck's Major Company grant from the NAC helps defray its programming and manpower expenses, but does not support building and infrastructural costs.

There will also be various fund-raising events such as workshops, talks, as well as an auction in November.

Lee adds that space in Singapore is often seen as something temporal. "What does this mean for art spaces and for Deck?" she muses.

Renting a space under the NAC's Arts Housing Scheme, would be shorter-term than they would like, and subject to certain conditions.

"It is very pragmatic thinking – our resources are limited and we have to make sure (spaces are rotated) to ensure new generations of artistsRead More – Source

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