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Celebrating Women” – A Charity Art Exhibition

celebrating women art exhibition 3Mark 7 March 2013, on your calendar for the opening night of “Celebrating Women”, the inaugural charity art exhibition that highlights women’s issues, in commemoration of International Women’s Day, which falls on 8 March every year. In association with AWARE, which is launching the global We Can End All Violence Against Women campaign in Singapore this year, 12 Singapore-based women artists will showcase the many faces of women and their real-life issues in the modern world. Additionally, 3 Singaporean women artists have been invited to perform spoken word and songs on the opening night. Curator and founder Pamela Ng feels a responsibility to showcase the larger, multi dimensional beauty of the women she knows and sees.

 The artists for the opening night include Deborah Emmanual, who will use the medium of spoken word to create healing and discussion, hoping to give women the courage to speak out against violence before it is too late. Charlene Shepherdson will perform impromptu poetry, from the words and phrases the audience will provide, in response to the artworks. Hard Rains are songwriters with a feminist slant.

“Celebrating Women” expands women’s roles beyond those decreed by society, illustrating a more holistic, encompassing view of women. We hope that women will find it empowering as they identify themselves in the the artists’ works and resonate with the issues they portray. In this way, we seek to encourage a sense of solidarity amongst women from all walks of life.

 Hopefully, this will be the first of many steps towards the celebration of International Womens’ Day in Singapore, where friends gather and renew bonds to support each other as sisters. We should take the opportunity on 8 March to remember that first individually, and then collectively, women and their perspectives are indispensable in a world that depends on them for sustenance.

We welcome all amazing women and the people who love them to join us in an inspiring night of art, poetry, music, food and wine. The evening will open with introductions by AWARE and Pamela, the founder and curator on the artworks. A portion of all artwork sales proceeds go to AWARE, towards ending violence against women.

We are all very excited about the evening and sincerely hope to see you there!

EVENT DETAILS

Date: 7th March 2013

Time: 7pm – 9pm

Venue: One East Asia Art Space,  15 Scotts Road #05-08/09 Thong Teck Building, Singapore 228218

Sponsors: The kind sponsors for this exhibition are One East Asia for the venue, Cedele for the F&B on the opening night and generous individuals who reached into their own pockets for artists’ materials.

PROGRAMME DETAILS

Opening Night of “Celebrating Women”

7.00pm – 7.30pm
Registration, Mingling, Cocktails (Wine & Light Bites)

7.30pm – 7.45pm
– Opening Speeches: Winifred Loh, President of AWARE and Pamela Ng, Curator of Celebrating Women
– Announcement by Pamela Ng on audience engagement for Improv Performance

7.45pm – 8.00pm
Spoken Word Performance by Deborah Emmanuel

8.00pm – 8.15pm
Music Performance by Hard Rains; Vocals by Zuni, Guitar accompaniment by Abel

8.15pm – 8.30pm
Interval for audience to gather their thoughts for the upcoming interactive segment

8.30pm – 8.45pm
Improv Spoken Word Performance by Charlene Sheperdson, composed from the audience’s reaction to the artworks and performances

ARTWORK THEMEwomen-in-art

Traditional vs Modern

Izziyana Suhaimi uses traditional embroidery to re-connect women to each other in today’s fragmented world. Through the ages, women used embroidery to mark important events of their lives and to articulate their emotions, hopes and dreams. Embroidery thus has the power to connect women, both past and present. Social media platforms are today’s digital fabric, and like embroidery, share a secret language, like a code, between women. Eunice Lim turns familiar fairytales on their headsto illuminate women’s value and unwavering strength despite circumstances. The works will reveal real-life situations and misconceptions that are not often highlighted but frequently experienced by women.

 Strength to Rise Above Odds

Kelly Reedy explores the singular dreams and musings of women. Inspired by poetry, this collection of works portrays the strength and hope that springs from engaging fully in life, no matter how difficult the situation. Also drawing on the strength of women, Allison M. Low works centre on this line: “I am held up by the very sticks that you used to beat me down”. As a metaphor for overcoming abuse and rising above their experiences, women perch atop battered, mishandled pieces of furniture.

 Freedom from Societal Norms

Clare Marie Ryan endorses the superwomen that lie dormant within all females. She urges the reclamation of the female body with affirmations of self-love and confidence. The independent woman is portrayed with poignant sensuality, depicting an interaction between the self and body, freed of social stigmas. Debra Raymond uses thought-provoking visuals that marry art and science to deliver a social commentary on the modern world’s notions of beauty. Women’s roles are socially determined and not biologically inherent and she believes women will be empowered once they can free themselves from the pressure to conform to narrowly-defined ideals.

 Women as an Essential Force

Madhvi Subrahmanian uses ceramic “yoni pods’ to pay homage to the power and essence of women. In India, the word “yoni” stands for the supreme female principle, and the “lingam” is the male principle, where the world’s existence is dependant on the “yoni”. Kavita Issar Batra likens mothers to trees that nourish offspring and the communities that surround them. As a stable force in the changing forces of life, women can make the journey of life breathlessly exhilarating.

 Inner Worlds of Women

Zoey Nguyen Le Thuy Duong grapples with the sense of disassociation in the age of information transparency. Technology further fragments a person’s sense of identity and belonging, compounding the duality of a modern woman – having to carry the weight of embracing her softer nature and at the same time working towards equality. Tamae Iwasaki casts aside polite Asian civility to delve into the deep world within women, where two people’s worlds overlap, even for a moment. Her works speak of important people in her life that help her recognize her true self and even her own darkness.

 We the Global Citizens

Jamie Marie Lewis uses waterproof ink and ice blocks in herephemeral work that shares how a woman’s complexity and tenacity enable her to forgive and move on from challenges such as geographical displacement. In the same light, Ketna Patel speaks of women as global citizens who harmonise cultural norms with the spirit of modern goddesses.

Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/ARTCELEBRATINGWOMEN

For more information, please contact Pamela Ng at email.pamela.ng.here@gmail.com or 9021 0872; or Pam at pam@aware.org.sg or 6779 7137.

Registration for this event is free. To register, please click here.

What Counts? – An Evening of Poetry

the inspired word

Come down on 15th March for What Counts?, a literary event jointly presented by AWARE and Etiquette SG in conjunction with International Women’s Day 2013.

Too often, numbers seem to dominate conversation in Singapore. From birth rates and population papers to exam scores and salaries, we seem obsessed as a nation, with things that can be counted: How much do you make? How much does it cost? How much can I save? How many kids? How much time? How near how far how long how old how well how much?

Feminist discourse has long opined the models and methods of traditional economics and its exclusion of gender, power dynamics and non-market activity from its considerations: History has often rendered the work of women – domestic, professional and creative- invisible or without value.

It’s quite clear that in life and on record, what counts is not always counted.

What matters to you? To what do you attribute value? What is that one precious thing that transcends this culture so focused on figure and fact? By what rules do you measure your success?

Using the theme of ‘what counts?’, original and selected works of poetry, music and spoken word will be performed by established and emerging writers from different walks of life. Some of our anchor writers include Dana Lam, Nabilah Husna, Tania de Rozario and Ummai Ummairoh.

So free your calendars for this event – bring your friends to an evening of words and images, to celebrate the things that matter. Register here.

 

EVENT DETAILS What Counts

Date: 15 MARCH 2013

Time: 7.30pm to 9.30pm

Venue: One East Asia Art Space, 15 Scotts Road, #05-08/09, Thong Teck Building, Singapore 228218

 

REGISTER HERE FOR THE EVENT.

*Please be advised that some of the pieces presented on the day may contain explicit content.

Roundtable Discussion: Gender in Indian Scripture

prema jayakumar

Feminine Protests in the Ramayana and Mahabharata

Ahalya draupadi sita tara mandodari tatha
Panchakanya smarennityam mahapatakanasanam

To this day, Indian children may hear their grandmothers recite this stanza devoutly every morning. The stanza utters the names of five prominent female characters in Indian tradition. These are the women of the puranas, or ancient Indian literature. Yet none of them fit the archetype of the submissive wife who walks in her husband’s footsteps, head lowered and eyes to the ground. Each of them, perhaps with the exception of the demon, or rakshasa queen Mandodari, has either transgressed or been accused of transgressing the conventional ideas of pativratya (chastity).

We assume that the modern day woman is much more assertive and challenges the norm much more readily than her ancestors. All the talk of women being the keepers of social morality and traditional values, and suffering every oppression in silence so that the family remains intact, has blinded us to what the women in the epics actually said and did. We have been brainwashed by the depictions of puranic women in television soap operas which portray them as submissive, long-suffering icons. But a close reading of the classic texts will tell us that they are very self-assured and aware of their rights, and vocal about it too. Be it Sita and Mandodari in the Ramayana or Kunti and Draupadi of Mahabharata, they dare to question and protest injustice against women. They are not just women from the epics, they are epic women. Let us examine their lives and their transgressions.

EVENT DETAILS

Date: 19 February 2013, Tue
Time: 7.30pm-9.30pm
Venue: AWARE Centre Block 5 Dover Crescent #01-22 S’pore (130005)

Chair: Ms. Sunita Venkataraman

About the speaker:
Leading translator and acclaimed Sanskrit scholar Prema Jayakumar was born and raised in Kerala. She went to school in Kochi and Bangalore, graduating with an M. A. in English. After 20 years of working for the State Bank of India as a probationary officer, she quit and followed her dream of telling stories. Some of her more notable published works include Wind from the Hills, which was shortlisted for the Crossword award 2008 and featured on the long-list for the Golden Quill Award; Yakshi,  picked by BBC for their Off the Bookshelf programme; and Pandavapuram, which inspired a Bengali movie. Also a literary columnist for the Mathrubhumi Weekly and literary reviewer for Indiavision and the New Indian Express, she does translations of short stories, poems, articles and reviews from Malayalam to English. She has written 5 books on mythology for children, and a key area of expertise includes looking at Indian Mythology from a gendered perspective.

Please register for the event here or send email to Pam at publiceducation@aware.org.sg.

Daughters of Tomorrow Charity Screening: Miss Representation

Miss Representation 3_0As part of our International Women’s Day celebration, AWARE and Daughters of Tomorrow (DOT) are holding a screening of Miss Representation. Miss Representation is a highly acclaimed US documentary that premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and was the winner of the Audience award at the 2011 Sonoma film festival.

It is also part of an on-going educational outreach/social movement in the US spearheaded by the non-profit organization Missrepresentation.org based in San Francisco. The movement has spread to various cities in the US including New York and other countries including Ireland, the Netherlands and Canada.

The film exposes how mainstream media contributes to the under-representation of women in positions of leadership and influence in America. The influence of American culture in Singapore is undeniable – the issues analyzed in the documentary are relevant to Singapore’s media as well as its corporate and political scene.

The film takes a critical look at the media and features many American women leaders such as Condoleezza Rice, Nancy Pelosi, Gloria Steinem and Katie Couric. Please find below details of the documentary and its international movement.


Event Details

Date: 8 March 2013
Venue: NACLI – National Community Leadership Institute (70 South Buona Vista Road Singapore)
Time: 7.30pm

Admission (note the film is rated NC-16):
$10 per ticket
$9 for bulk booking of 75 pax and above

10% of proceeds go to AWARE, with remainder going to DOT’s Livelihood Training Fund for 3rd World Women.

Please email Empower@DaughtersOfTomorrow.com to book tickets. Payment details will be advised upon confirmation.

About DOT:
Daughters Of Tomorrow is a social dot-logoenterprise retailing products with positive social impact. They channel profits to enable livelihood training for disadvantaged women in the 3rd world.

AWARE Responds To The Population Paper

2 February 2013

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

“Population Paper – Why No Public Consultation and Considerations of Social Justice?”population

It is commendable that the Government has released a Population Paper setting out its proposed population strategy from now till 2030. This forward planning and transparency is most welcome.

However, AWARE is concerned that the Government has once again focused on economic growth, rather than the well being of its people, as the main determinant of Singapore’s population size and rate of growth.

AWARE is also disappointed that there is no provision for thorough public consultation on the proposed population strategy. Why is the Government targeting for the Paper to be endorsed by Parliament within just a week of its release? This is unduly hasty given the major implications of the proposed strategy. Singaporeans have in the last few days shown their anxiety and unhappiness about these implications. More time must be given for people to ask questions and express their concerns.

The Paper indicates that to achieve certain GDP targets, Singapore’s population in 2020 must be 6.5 million and reach 6.9 million by 2030.

quality-of-lifeAWARE believes that the primary objective of Singapore’s population policy should not be economic growth per se, but the well being of people in Singapore. GDP growth can be one factor, but not the ultimate factor in population considerations. The critical question that the Paper should have addressed is “What is the optimum population to achieve maximum well-being for all members of Singapore society?”

Well-being goes beyond GDP growth. It encompasses a broader range of considerations including fulfilling jobs and rising incomes across-the-board, economic security, equitable distribution of wealth, universal access to affordable healthcare and education.

By focusing solely on GDP growth, The Paper fails to mention, let alone address, issues of inequality and lack of social mobility. This omission is worrying considering that the last ten years of liberal immigration policy has resulted in wage erosion at the lower end and given rise to a widening Gini Coefficient and wealth disparities.

Of greater concern is what the omission reflects about the Government’s general approach to managing Singapore. The many appeals for a fairer, more equitable and less materialistic society made by Singaporeans in the National Conversation and the public consultation on population issues, including AWARE’s submissions, seem to have fallen on deaf ears.

Despite receiving clear signals that public sentiment on this issue is strong, the Government is fixated on GDP growth through population expansion. The cost to society can already be seen in the claustrophobia and diminished quality of life that many Singaporeans complain about.

The proposed population strategy raises many issues which require consideration and debate (see Annex A for some issues that AWARE is concerned about). The research that must have gone into this is not reflected in this Paper. Many different scenarios must have been studied. The Government should make all the research and arguments available to enable a thorough and rigorous discussion of this issue.

We urge the Government to conduct a proper public consultation on this Paper and to share the research and data behind the Paper, before seeking endorsement of the proposed policy in Parliament. Members of Parliament should be given the time to get the views of their constituents before they debate and vote on the Paper.

What is needed is rigorous debate and shared ownership of the decisions made about Singapore’s future.
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AWARE had made two submissions to the National Population and Talent Division on Population, Marriage and Parenthood issues. For the full text of our submissions, please refer to:

https://aware.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/AWAREs-population-recommendations-to-NPTD_31Oct12.pdf

https://aware.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/Suggestions-to-NPTD_update_24-July.pdf

Annex A

Social Justice

What will the impact of a 2% growth in the foreign labour force have on wages at the lower end? How will the Government ensure that the Gini Coefficient and wealth disparities will not continue to widen?

While the majority of Singaporeans may be in PMET jobs, what about those that aren’t? What support will there be for those that find themselves in the lower end jobs?

Will the government consider providing the following social supports to mitigate the effects of a more crowded and competitive place?

a)    Unemployment insurance

b)    Universal healthcare through insurance with government subsidizing the premiums of those who cannot afford this

c)    Universal childcare benefits that do not favour the rich e.g. tax reliefs  / exemptions

Impact of Higher Population Density on Families

High density living gives rise to feelings of insecurity and increased pressure and competition. This will in turn have an impact on individuals’ fertility decisions. Has the Government factored in what impact higher population density will have on the Total Fertility Rate? What measures will be taken to ensure that the goal of Building a Strong Singaporean Core is not adversely affected by high population density. What assumptions about Total Fertility Rate is the government making when doing its projections?

Getting More Residents in the Workforce

At any one time, more than 30% of females   are out of the workforce. A lot more can be done to get them into the workforce, which will reduce the need for importing foreign labour.

The Paper mentions that the Government will try to get more residents into the workforce but does not set any targets for this.

What assumptions have been made about this factor?

Ageing Population

The paper refers to ‘Declining Old Age Support Ratio’ as the number of citizens between 20-64 that supports a citizen above 65

Why should only citizens provide support for older people? Is this an accurate way of looking at it? Should we not take into account the total workforce (including foreigners) rather than just citizens? If the foreign workforce is included, the support base would be much stronger.

Stabilityforeign workers singapore

If 36% of our workforce is foreign will we be overly reliant on foreign workers? Would this dependence be healthy and sustainable? We have a responsibility to protect and uphold the dignity of the foreign workers who come here to seek a living, and contribute much to our economy and society. How do we ensure that we provide decent conditions of work so that we become a country of choice for foreign workers?

Alternative Scenarios

The Paper gives one option – that of 3-5% growth between now and 2020, and thereafter 2 – 3% growth between 2020 and 2030. Why has the Government chosen this particular model?  What about other scenarios?

Painting Experience Workshop

manjeet artThe Painting Experience Workshop focuses on teaching participants to see a painting through the eyes of the artist using light and shade to put across an idea or message, to evoke a feeling or mood. In essence, it is about how to look at paintings. Participants will also be shown and discuss various works by master and contemporary artists.

Another important dimension has been the therapeutic advantage of the workshop. Many participants joined as a form of relaxation, to relieve stress from their everyday jobs. They have found that turning their attention to art has helped relieve their stress levels considerably.

Participants in previous workshops have consisted of a wide age range, and from all kinds of backgrounds. Some have had previous art training, many not. The majority attend because they say they want an insight into art enabling them to enjoy galleries and museums more fully, while others regard the workshop as a preliminary introduction before going on to take a more intensive drawing and painting course.


Workshop Outline:

Composition
This constitutes the most important layer of a painting, for it is in composition that the visual story is created.

Drawing – 60 minutes
Drawing is essentially about working with lines. Using a pencil and eraser, and other simple artist’s equipment such as oil pastels, the participant will begin drawing in order to learn how to place lines on a page, as well as how to handle the drawing media.

Colour
This part of the workshop focuses on the use of colour in a painting. Participants will learn to dissect colour scientifically, and understand what elements different colours are made from.

Painting – 60 minutes
Apply knowledge and produce a still life

Discussion
Participants will discuss the idea of originality in a painting by using examples of their favourite artists, and then begin to discover their own originality.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

About the artist
A graduate of St. Patrick’s Art Centre (now LasalleE-SIA College of the Arts), the Singaporean artist Manjeet Shergill began exhibiting her work in 1982, both in Singapore and abroad, where she has been well received. She established the independent Shergill Studio from which she paints, and from where her works have been consigned to galleries in Berlin, Bangkok and London. Manjeet Shirgill is a celebrated artist who contributes greatly to the advancement of the arts in Singapore through her paintings and through the success of her popular Creative Art Workshops.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________

Event details
Date: 16 February 2013
Time: 10am – 2pm
Venue: AWARE Centre (location)
Fee: S$450.00 (includes all materials)

Simple lunch will be provided.

Feel free to bring along artworks that you’ve done to share to the class.

So what are you waiting for? Sign-up now and discover the hidden artist in you!

To register for the workshop, please click here or send email to Pam at publiceducation@aware.org.sg.

Give us your input for an inclusive budget!

The Government is inviting views from the public for the Singapore Budget 2013, and AWARE is participating!

Last year, we called for an inclusive budget to support a caring society. Before we make our recommendations for this year, we want to hear from you.

Have you applied for a government grant before? What was your experience?

Do you think our government schemes promote an inclusive and caring society?

What is your feedback (good and bad) on our healthcare policies, especially in view of an ageing population?

Is there adequate support provided for lower income and vulnerable groups?

How about schemes for families, in particular, infant care and childcare? Are they sufficient / appropriate?

Are government policies sensitive enough to persons with disabilities?

Tell us your stories and your views! Email your responses to media@aware.org.sg by 21st Jan 2013.

Join us for our Book & Bake Sale!

 

AWARE will be holding a Book & Bake Sale on Saturday, 23th February 2013 from 11am – 5pm at the AWARE Centre. We will be selling second-hand books! There will also be a small café where you can buy baked goods and tea or coffee to enjoy while looking over your new purchases!

This event is open to all AWARE members and their friends. All proceeds will go towards running costs of the AWARE Centre.

We would greatly appreciate it if you could donate your second-hand books, CDs, and DVDs to the sale. Each item donated in good condition will entitle you to 1 AWARE Dollar, which can be used at the sale! These are the guidelines for donated items:

WHAT WE ESPECIALLY WANT

  • New York Times Bestsellers
  • Cookbooks
  • Classics
  • Feminism
  • Children’s Books
  • Delicious Baked Goods!

WHAT WE CAN’T TAKE – Sorry!

  • Old, Yellow & Mottled Books
  • Fifty Shades Trilogy
  • Pulp Fiction
  • Business
  • Health
  • Spirituality & Religion
  • Dummy’s Guides
  • Old Travel Guides
  • Cassette Tapes
  • Textbooks & Workbooks
  • Magazines
  • Clothes
  • Music CDs

Book Drop:
You can drop your books at the AWARE Centre from January 7 to February 15, 2013 Monday to Friday from 11am to 5pm.

Baked Goods:
We also would like donations of baked goods for the cafe. If you are willing to donate baked goods, please contact Evon at evon@aware.org.sg or 6779 7137.

For more info on donations or the event, please contact the AWARE Secretariat at 6779 7137.

Roundtable Discussion: Pre-Budget Forum 2013

The Singapore Budget is prepared each financial year, which beings on 1 April of every calendar year and ends on 31 March of the next calendar year. The Budget includes the revised government revenue and expenditure projections for the current financial year, as well as the planned government revenue and expenditures for the upcoming financial year.

To contribute to the public consultation for Budget 2013, AWARE is convening a roundtable discussion on the areas that we feel strongly about.

 

EVENT DETAILS

Date: Saturday, 26 January 2013

Time: 1.30pm – 3.30pm

Venue: AWARE Centre Block 5 Dover Crescent #01-22 S’pore (130005)

Panel of speakers include: Yeoh Lam Keong, Donald Low and Vivienne Wee

Abstract

Over the last two years AWARE has made recommendations to the Minister of Finance as part of the public consultations for Budget 2011 and Budget 2012.

This year, building on our past advocacy efforts, AWARE is advocating for a care economy that will focus on:

a. Comprehensive healthcare

b. Adequate support for care giving

c. Reducing the Gini Co-efficient and increasing social mobility

d. Increasing support for vulnerable groups, especially those who are affected by multiple layers of discrimination

At this forum, we will be presenting our recommendations for Budget 2013. Please come to express your views so that they may be incorporated into our recommendations.

Please register for the event here.