Events
Photos by Caleb Ming/SURROUND, AleciaNeo, Noorlinah Mohamed, A. SyadiqPANEL DISCUSSION
NO SPACE FOR ART: IS THE FRINGE DEAD?
Featuring Anais Adjani, Kok Heng Leun, Melissa Lim, and Noorlinah Mohamed as panellists, and facilitated by Charlene Rajendran
Book Now↗In just a few years, many small art spaces in Singapore have closed. This includes The Necessary Stage's theatre (2022) and The Projector (2025). Other places like The Substation and Centre 42 had to return their spaces to the government. Many artists and arts lovers are very sad about this. In 2024, the Singapore Fringe Festival lost its main donor. With the help of artists and the public, they raised enough money to hold the festival again in 2026.
There are few places left to create and present bold and creative art with social themes. This is worrying. We have fewer chances to talk, work together, and connect with people different than us. Is this the end for art that is less popular? Are independent artists who try new things being pushed out because of money problems or a lack of interest? What can we do together to help independent art not just survive, but grow?
This will be discussed by:
- Anais Adjani
- Kok Heng Leun
- Melissa Lim
- Noorlinah Mohamed
Charlene Rajendran will guide the discussion. She is a theatre teacher and expert in plays.
If you need speech to text interpretation for the talk, please email us at info@singaporefringe.com by 5 December 2025.
WIn a span of less than five years, the Singapore arts and cultural scene has seen the demise of several independent arts spaces. From The Necessary Stage’s black box theatre in 2022 to The Projector in 2025, and to The Substation and Centre 42 having to relinquish their venues back to the authorities, these losses have been deeply mourned by the local arts community and audiences. In 2024, the Singapore Fringe Festival lost their title donor. But the support from the public and artists rallying around the festival’s crowdfunding initiative made it possible for the 2026’s ground-up Fringe to take place.
There is cause for alarm in the diminishing spaces for the incubation and presentation for bold, inventive, and socially pertinent art-making. We are suddenly left bereft of spaces for crucial discourse, collaboration, and civic engagement amongst diverse communities. It compels the question: does this spell the end of fringe arts? Are independent creators who push the envelope and challenge the mainstream being edged out because of market forces, or worse, a dismaying decline of interest? What can we collectively do to ensure that fringe arts will not only survive but thrive in our landscape?
Join us for a candid and insightful panel discussion with Anais Adjani, Kok Heng Leun, Melissa Lim, and Noorlinah Mohamed, facilitated by theatre educator and dramaturg Charlene Rajendran.
Speech to text interpretation is available upon request. Please email your request to info@singaporefringe.com by 5 December 2025.
Date & Duration
24 January 2026, 1pm
90 minutes with no intermission
Venue
Esplanade Black Room
Tickets
Free via registration at bookmyshow.sg
Accessibility Features
· Speech to text interpretation upon request
Share
︎