{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Street Art Cities","provider_url":"https://streetartcities.com","title":"Dream of a Third Place by Claire Chee","description":"This artwork is a tribute to the spirit of Hainanese kopitiams that populated Joo Chiat in the early 20th century. Joshua Goh writes that these spaces were more than stops for consumption (MuseSG 10:1, 2017). By the 1960s, kopitiams provided a lively environment for people of all walks and races to create community. Khairudin Aljunied expands further on this sentiment, on the kopitiam as a rich site of political imagination, neighbourhood organisation, and publicly informed selfhood (Oxford University Press, 2013).The mural depicts a portal view into an anachronistic, fictional kopitiam with multiracial characters playing music, chatting, minding children and reading the newspaper. Done in a sunset sepia duotone palette, the image is suffused with a romantic warm light that both emulates golden hour and emphasises surreality.Aljunied disagreed that kopitiams succeeded at being a 'Third Place': somewhere that is neither home nor work. A site in land-scarce Singapore that does not justify its existence by bare necessity or profit. But the nature of a dream is that it can move both backwards and forwards: a dream of a lost past, or a dream of a future to strive for.","author_name":"Street Art NSW","author_url":"https://streetartcities.com/users/2ca3b91f-c572-4a70-a390-9e02fca20916","thumbnail_url":"https://streetart.media/9/94dd68ee-4bc3-48fb-98a5-fc5f8630f52b/1024.jpg","thumbnail_width":1024,"width":480,"height":480,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://streetartcities.com/markers/cabf9707-b5b7-41c6-b0fa-0382e3c03948/embed\" width=\"480\" height=\"480\" style=\"border:none;border-radius:12px;max-width:100%;\" loading=\"lazy\" allow=\"fullscreen; storage-access\" title=\"Dream of a Third Place by Claire Chee\"></iframe>","cache_age":3600}