与新加坡华族文化中心一起探索中秋节的传统!

Uncover the traditions of Mid-Autumn Festival with the Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre!

Uncover the traditions of Mid-Autumn Festival with the Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre! - 新加坡华族文化中心

Uncover the traditions of Mid-Autumn Festival with the Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre!

与新加坡华族文化中心一起探索中秋节的传统

screenshot-2020-12-10-at-12.17.20-pm

Goddess of the Moon by Moon Malek (@moon_malek)

 [This artwork is a part of the Mythology Exhibition hosted by SCCC. Images and artwork are not to be reproduced without permission from the artist.]

 

Singapore, 16 September 2020 – Lantern walks, mooncake tasting, and lantern riddles – these are familiar practices observed by the Chinese community in Singapore during the Mid-Autumn Festival! 

2 Taking place on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, the festival has its roots as a harvest festival when farmers gave thanks to the moon for a plentiful harvest. One of the  most popular stories associated with the festival is the legend of Chang’e  who swallowed an elixir of immortality and fled to moon, to prevent it from falling into a villain’s hands. 

3 To encourage a better appreciation of our distinctive Chinese Singaporean culture, the Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre has launched a series of online programmes to highlight  the customs and traditions of this festival. 

4 Let our friendly and knowledgeable Kaki share with you the stories and beliefs behind our traditional Chinese festivals. You can hone your skills at lantern riddles with riddle enthusiast Qiu Rong as she breaks down the ins-and-outs of these challenging brain teasers in an engaging online tutorial. Viewers can also watch the heart-warming animation Moonlit Memories, produced in collaboration with students from Nanyang Polytechnic (School of Interactive & Digital Media) to bring back fond memories of the festivities. 

5 Families and friends can revel in moon-themed classic hits as The Apex Project performs a Mid-Autumn medley at the Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall. The music video is the first instalment of a series, in partnership with the National Heritage Board, which features our homegrown talents performing at our National Monuments. 

6 The public can learn more about Mid-Autumn Festival through the following programmes: 

  • Kaki Says: Mid-Autumn Festival 

卡其说:中秋节

Available from 28 September 2020, 2pm

Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre YouTube | Instagram | Facebook

From the legend of Wu Gang the woodcutter, to secret messages hidden in mooncakes in Yuan China – discover the traditions and lesser-known legends surrounding Mid-Autumn Festival! 

  • Keeping Traditions Alive: Riddle Me This

保留传统习俗:猜灯谜,传真情

Available from 18 September 2020, 2pm

Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre YouTube | Instagram | Facebook

How do you approach a lantern riddle, and is there a hack to solving them? Try your turn at this Mid-Autumn Festival staple with riddle enthusiast Qiu Rong from the Riddle Association (Singapore) as she breaks down the ins-and-outs of these challenging brain teasers! Hear why she started this hobby, and how lantern riddles enable her to learn more about other cultures. Follow her fun demonstration and you’ll be a Riddle Master in no time!  

  • Moonlit Memories

月夜记事 

Available from 11 September 2020, 6pm

Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre YouTube | Instagram | Facebook

How do you celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival? Set against the backdrop of our familiar HDB flats, follow Chang’e and join in her heart-warming celebration, complete with lanterns and mooncakes. This animation is a collaboration with students from Nanyang Polytechnic (School of Interactive & Digital Media). 

  • Music at Monuments – NHB x SCCC

国家古迹音乐系列国家文物局 x 新加坡华族文化中心

Available from 24 September 2020, from 10am 

Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre YouTube | Instagram | Facebook

Bask in the voices of local a cappella band The Apex Project as they present a medley of moon-themed songs to celebrate Mid-Autumn Festival at Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall, Singapore’s 33rd National Monument! Co-presented by the Preservation of Sites & Monuments division of the National Heritage Board and Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre, this is the first of the Music at Monuments – NHB x SCCC series which features our homegrown talents performing at our National Monuments.

  • MYTHOLOGY: THE REMIX 

•MIX街头艺术展:艺起上街 

Ongoing

Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre Website 

Explore a modern re-imagination of traditional Chinese myths and legends, such as a modern interpretation Goddess of the Moon by Moon Malek (@moon_malek) where  Chang’e looks at us from her home on the moon. Log on and discover these refreshed takes on Chinese mythology by twenty local artists today!

  • SINGAPO: Discovering Chinese Singaporean Culture 

新加坡华人·探索本土华族文化

Ongoing 

Open daily from 2pm – 8pm on Monday, and from 10am – 8pm, Tuesday to Sunday

Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre, Level 2 (1 Straits Boulevard, Singapore 018906)

Free Admission

How much do you know about the local celebrations during Mid-Autumn Festival? Find out more at the Centre’s SINGAPO人 exhibition which highlights Chinese Singaporean culture through festivals, food, and languages. Learn how Chinese culture in Singapore has evolved in a way quite unlike other communities around the world. Come discover (and rediscover) what it means to be a ‘Chinese Singapo人’ today. 

7 Members of the public can visit Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre’s social media channels on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook to gain access to its online programmes. For more information, please visit www.singaporeccc.org.sg.

###For media enquiries, please contact:

Soh Deng Yang

Tate Anzur

Tel: 9889 2518

Email: dengyang.soh@tateanzur.com

Michelle Wong

Tate Anzur
Tel: 9182 4908
Email: michelle.wong@tateanzur.com 

About Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre

The Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre collaborates with arts and cultural groups and community partners to promote and develop local Chinese culture. Through engaging and accessible content, we hope to nurture greater appreciation of our multi-cultural identity and a stronger sense of belonging.

 

Opened by our Patron, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on 19 May 2017, our centre in the heart of the city welcomes everyone to enjoy exhibitions, fairs, performances, seminars, talks, workshops and other cultural activities throughout the year. 

For more information, please visit https://www.singaporeccc.org.sg/.

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