Mackerel: The focus of your essay seems to be the physical natural (read: undeveloped) landscape. What are your thoughts on the urban landscape that is Singapore today?
Michelle Heng: Singapore and its present urban landscape speak of our present-day relationship with the natural environment which has since come a long way. Singapore is now a sprawling metropolis with abundant natural spaces where human and nature co-exist. This was largely influenced by the “garden city” vision that was introduced in May 1967 which aimed to transform Singapore into a city with abundant lush greenery.
This historical relationship is explored closely in the National Library Board’s exhibition, Human x Nature: The Environmental Histories of Singapore. It traces the study of nature through the work of Malayan naturalists and local knowledge, the changes in our landscape due to deforestation for agriculture from the 19th to early 20th century, and finally the contemporary efforts to restore Singapore’s natural environment.
In the final section of the exhibition, there are posters of tree-planting as well as of flowers in Singapore which reference the historical significance of the Garden City campaign and its initial phase of intensive tree-planting to rebuild Singapore’s natural environment. The Flowers of Singapore: Special Stamp Issue poster featured a commemorative stamp collection issued to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Tree Planting Day which began in 1971 as a part of the Garden City campaign.
The urban landscape that is Singapore today is a result of not just the Garden City campaign, but also the history of Singapore’s plantations, agriculture, and local knowledge traced by the exhibition.
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In Eric Tinsay Valles’ “Singapore River on Exhibit”, a poem published in 2015 and inspired by an exhibition at the Asian Civilisations Museum, the poet pays tribute to what must have been abundant aquatic life teeming beneath the murky waters of the Singapore River (before it was cleaned up), alongside the multicultural, multilingual tapestry of commerce taking place along its shores:
Majestic in the middle of a frame,
A green streak undulating like grass snake,
pristine on uncluttered canvas,
you draw orang laut dreaming of tomorrow
on a boat pulling away in the muddy water
until they are washed away from the scene.
They bend down, count the day’s catch,
watch you run past them.
Here, the Singapore River is observed from a safe (and clean!) distance within a frame at an exhibition. However, this is not another poem decrying the ravages of progress, but a lyrical musing that ponders on the river’s versatility and enduring mystique:
Cycles of drought and rain, urban renewal
neither detain your dance nor silence your hum.
You are slighted by tourists distracted by the Merlion
spitting in envy at the floating Sands garden.
Shoot a spray at the passing glory
as you rush home to the strait.
Twigs of time scrape against imagery
as you pass by and through me.
The Singapore River, in the eyes of this poet, hums with life despite its present urban-renewed look and smoothly glides past the gleaming glass-and-steel of Marina Bay Sands. Its dignity inspires the poet to “write blank verses” having witnessed the changing tides of history. Valles’ poem, while unapologetically highlighting the tourist attractions that have sprung up near the river, pays tribute to an enduring natural landmark.
from ‘The Nature of Poetry: An Odyssey Across Time’