Tuesday, February 16, 2016

2016 Update!

Wow. It's been a while since I've posted here. Over the last few years I've been posting my travel sketches at my other blog http://sketchpacker.blogspot.sg/ more. Time to start posting here again.

So much has happened since my last post! I've done a lot of sketches, contributed to several books, and perhaps most significantly, participated in several SG50 initiatives including the SG Heart Map and the publication of 50 Meters: Our Swimming Pools. I'll put up posts on those soon, but in the meantime, I thought I'd just bring this blog up to date with some of my favourite sketches over the past 2+ years.

Ann Siang Hill
Copyright © Favian Ee
The red shophouse has been painted over and is no longer red

Copyright © Favian Ee

BronzAge Gamelan performing at Bedok Library
Copyright © Favian Ee

Band performances by different schools
Copyright © Favian Ee

Asian Contemporary Ensemble
Copyright © Favian Ee

Food Court at City Square Mall
Copyright © Favian Ee

Fairfield Carnival 2013 at Fairfield Methodist School (Secondary)
Copyright © Favian Ee

Fairfield Carnival 2013 at Fairfield Methodist School (Primary)
Copyright © Favian Ee

Music jam session at the Botanical Gardens
Copyright © Favian Ee

Katong Shopping Centre
Copyright © Favian Ee

Cardboard collection point at Veerasamy Road, Little India
The life of cardboard collectors in Singapore is a tough one
Copyright © Favian Ee

Monday, December 9, 2013

Some sketches on brown paper sketchbook that my friend makes.






Panoramic Sketches

I bought a Derwent panoramic sketchbook recently. Been trying it out. Quite nice.

Copyright Favian Ee  2013

Copyright Favian Ee  2013

Copyright Favian Ee  2013

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Queenstown Sketches

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Copyright © Favian Ee  2013

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Fort Canning Park #1

Fort Canning Hill is just next to the hotel where my church is currently meeting at (our building is not big enough for our congregation, so we have to rent the ballroom). I've been visiting the place to explore and sketch for the last 3 weeks, and I really like the place. It is a place rich in history, nature and architecture. What more could an Urban Sketcher ask for?

Fort Canning is a place that is rich in Singapore's colonial history, but its history goes further back than our country's founding by the British in 1819 to the early days of Singapura's first rulers in the 14th century. Back then it was called Bukit Larangan, which in Malay means "Forbidden Hill", for the Malays back then would not ascend the hill unless summoned by the ruler. Raffles, the founder of modern Singapore, was said to have been told of how local settlers were wary of ascending the hill as they believed it was the site of palaces built by their ancestral kings (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Canning).

After the founding of Singapore,  Sir Stamford Raffles, the founder of Singapore, built his first residence there, as well as Singapore's first botanical garden. The place served as a residence for the colony's governors, and the hill earned the name Government Hill. Not long after, however, Fort Canning was fortified as a military outpost and named after Fort Canning after Viscount Charles John Canning, the then-Governor-General, and has served as a military base through the Second World War up to the mid-late 1900s.

Today Fort Canning is a hill-park which serves as a venue for recreational, educational, and cultural activities.

In the following weeks, I hope to pay more visits and do more sketches of the different features and sites around Fort Canning Park. Here are 3 to start the ball rolling:

Fort Canning Light
Copyright © Favian Ee March 2013


Back of Hotel Fort Canning
Copyright © Favian Ee March 2013


Orchard 22
Copyright © Favian Ee March 2013
This row of colonial style buildings in the shopping district of Singapore
lie a few hundred metres from the northern foot of Fort Canning HIll