The Star Malaysia - Star2

Modern Singapore founder’s story

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To many, Sir Stamford Raffles is held in esteem as the founder of modern Singapore who initiated the setting up of a trading port there for the British East India company, following his arrival in 1819.

But a new exhibition opening next month at the Asian Civilisati­ons Museum (ACM) in Singapore will seek to peel back the layers of who the Briton was, down to his callous side.

Kennie Ting, the museum’s director, said the majority of Singaporea­ns “know” Raffles as a mythical, one-dimensiona­l “founder figure”.

He was, however, not only “a scholar and avid collector of natural and cultural heritage, but also a ruthless statesman and colonial opportunis­t”, said Ting in a statement.

While Raffles is generally respected in Singapore, scholars have highlighte­d how he led a violent assault in 1812 on Yogyakarta, then the biggest kingdom in Java, and humiliated its local rulers.

The exhibition, Raffles In Southeast Asia: Revisiting The Scholar And The Statesman, will be held from Feb 1 to April 28.

It is co-curated with the British Museum, whose Raffles Collection items on display will include Javanese and Sumatran objects Raffles personally collected while in the region.

In total, about 240 objects will be displayed, comprising sculpture, architectu­ral and natural history drawings, wayang (traditiona­l theatre) puppets and masks, gamelan musical instrument­s, kris daggers, and royal regalia of Indonesian sultans, said the ACM statement.

Institutio­ns and collectors from Britain, the Netherland­s, Indonesia and Singapore are also lending their objects, which reflect the aspects of South-East Asian history that most intrigued Raffles and the British, as well as some aspects they missed or refused to acknowledg­e, ACM added.

This will also be the first time pivotal objects pictured and discussed in Raffles’ book, The History Of Java, are gathered from different parts of the world at one venue, it said.

Besides presenting Raffles “as a complex and multifacet­ed personalit­y”, the exhibition has another aim: To showcase the rich artistic and cultural heritage of Java and the Malay world, said Ting.

The exhibition is part of the Singapore Bicentenni­al that marks the 200th anniversar­y of the Republic’s modern history. Various activities have been planned for people to reflect on and learn more of Singapore’s 700 years of rich history.

Ting said of the exhibition: “We hope to inspire visitors to look beyond the convention­al origin story of modern Singapore; to place this story against larger historical and geopolitic­al developmen­ts in the region.” – The Straits Times/Asia News Network

 ??  ?? A new exhibition on Sir Stamford Raffles at the Asian Civilisati­ons Museum in Singapore will seek to peel back the layers of who the Briton was, down to his callous side.
A new exhibition on Sir Stamford Raffles at the Asian Civilisati­ons Museum in Singapore will seek to peel back the layers of who the Briton was, down to his callous side.

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