Kueh Salah: A Kueh Creation Session with Mrydette
Blurb
What if things appeared and reappeared purely from the tips of our fingers? And remembering and forgetting became a buffet for the imagination? Feast your eyes and fingers on a creative kueh-making session by visual artist Mrydette, conducted in a delectable universe of her creation.
Learn to make your own homemade colourful playdough and specialty “kueh” from scratch with basic ingredients from the kitchen. Bring a tupperware to store and air dry your creations at home!
Bio
Mary Bernadette Lee (Mrydette) is an artist based in Singapore. Her practice is a phenomenological approach to understanding the relationship between exterior topography of body, architecture and place, and the interior tapestry of psychological states. Her work thrives on spontaneity of individual autonomy in art making. She believes Art should be accessible and as such, uses Art as a medium to work with children and the underprivileged to encourage expression and creation.
Kueh Salah is part of The Vanishing, Or Time Goes Away, the final chapter of The Substation’s 2018/19 programme Cities change. People die. Everything you know goes away.
For more information on the programme, visit citieschange.sg/The-Vanishing.
Tickets at http://kuehsalah.peatix.com.
Image Credit: The Substation
Age
6–12
Price
Children's Workshop Ticket: 15 SGD (on Peatix)
Telephone number
+65 6337 7535
Links
Address
Singapore45 Armenian Street, Singapore 179936
How to get there?
Train: 10 minute walk from City Hall, Bras Basah and Bencoolen MRTs
Bus:
Stamford Court: 124, 147, 166, 174, 174e, 190
Capitol Building: 7, 14, 14e, 16, 36, 77, 106, 111, 128, 131, 162, 162M, 167, 167e, 171, 175, 700, 700a, 850e, 857, 951E, 971E
SMU: 7, 14, 14e, 16, 36, 77, 106, 111, 124, 128, 131, 147, 162, 162M, 166, 167, 167e, 171, 174, 174e, 175, 700, 700a, 850e, 857, 951E, 971E
Taxi: Pick-up and drop-off on Loke Yew Street and walk one minute to The Substation
For drivers: Armenian Street is currently undergoing a major construction project. Public parking is still available in two nearby spots — the open carpark next to the Peranakan Museum, enter via Loke Yew Street, and the SMU Law School carpark, accessible from Coleman Street/Canning Rise.