Presented by Singapore Art Museum, Open Systems (OS) is a new initiative exploring the impacts of digital culture on creative expression.
Presented by Singapore Art Museum, Open Systems (OS) is a new initiative exploring the impacts of digital culture on creative expression. Focusing on creative code, software, and digital video, OS organises online exhibitions that engage directly with their sites of production: the screen, the browser, and the platform. In addition to presenting artworks designed for the desktop, OS hosts and documents online interventions and virtual programmes that explore the impacts of networked culture on creative expression.
The debut project OS1_Open Worlds presents alternative perspectives on the concept and significance of the “metaverse” by analysing the relationship between real and virtual worlds. Exploring video games as sites of production and intervention, the exhibition brings together international artists and thinkers who imagine worlds and scenarios which challenge the logics of enclosure, privatisation, and artificial scarcity imposed onto virtual realms. This process highlights the economic and social inequities of lived experience into digital space. Together, they suggest that game spaces may function as sites to rehearse novel modes of social, political, and spatial organisation.
Singapore Art Museum opened in 1996 as the first art museum in Singapore located in the cultural district of Singapore. Known as SAM, the museum presents contemporary art from a Southeast Asian perspective for artists, art lovers and the art curious in multiple venues across the island, including a new venue in the historic port area of Tanjong Pagar.
The museum is building one of the world's most important public collections of Southeast Asian contemporary art, with the aim of connecting the art and the artists to the public and future generations through exhibitions and programmes. SAM is working towards a humane and sustainable future by committing to responsible practices within its processes.