Singapore is falling in love with Vietnamese contemporary art — and for good reason. This article shows you what’s behind the buzz and how Phan Ling Gallery is creating a space for art that feels honest, human, and worth collecting.

Singapore–Vietnam Connection — Familiarity Meets Curiosity

For the first ten months of 2025, 300,693 Singaporeans visited Vietnam, highlighting the deep cultural and emotional ties shared between the two nations. Food, travel, craftsmanship, and business have long intertwined, making Vietnam feel familiar to many Singaporeans. Yet despite this closeness, much of what visitors experience remains surface-level — bustling markets, iconic streets, and curated tourist snapshots that reveal only fragments of Vietnamese life.

Singapore, however, is a city driven by curiosity. Its people are adventurous eaters, thoughtful travelers, and keen observers of culture. They value craftsmanship, heritage, and the refined aesthetic found throughout contemporary art and yet, familiarity often sparks a deeper desire: to understand the real stories beneath the surface. Beyond postcard images, they seek perspectives shaped by everyday life, generational histories, and the quiet resilience of communities rarely seen in mainstream media.

A panoramic sunset view of Singapore’s Marina Bay Sands and Gardens by the Bay, showcasing the city’s modern architecture and vibrant cultural landscape — the environment where Phan Ling Gallery brings contemporary Vietnamese art to life.
Credit: Printerest
Street view of the historic Hà Nội Mới building in Hanoi, with motorbikes passing by and vintage architecture in the background — capturing the cultural roots that inspire artists represented by Phan Ling Gallery.
Credit: Printerest

The relationship between Singapore and Vietnam continues to evolve into a cultural dialogue. Singaporeans know Vietnam well, but there remains a world beneath the surface waiting to be discovered. And for those who want to acquire contemporary art that carries these intimate stories, the journey becomes more than collecting — it becomes understanding.

Singaporeans want art that challenges familiar aesthetics, broadens their understanding, and reveals human truths often lost in commercial cycles.

Why Singaporeans Seek a Different Perspective in Contemporary Art

Singapore has become one of Asia’s most dynamic cultural destinations, home to a flourishing ecosystem of art spaces, art fairs, and creative communities. With such diversity, contemporary art in Singapore is often polished, technically impressive, globally influenced, and meticulously curated. Yet within this abundance, a quiet repetition emerges. Trends rise and fade at high speed; styles echo each other; and commercial pressures can make art feel industrialized — created to fill demand rather than to express an artist’s true vision.

Visitors observe a large woven contemporary sculpture at ART SG 2023, an international art fair showcasing leading regional and global galleries — a vibrant setting that reflects the artistic dialogue embraced by Phan Ling Gallery.
Photo: ART SG 2023 showcased an assembly of leading galleries from the region and around the world. Credit: Courtesy ART SG.

In this environment, a sense of overconsumption becomes difficult to ignore. Playwright Arthur Miller once remarked, When any creativity becomes useful, it is sucked into the vortex of commercialism, and when a thing becomes commercial, it becomes the enemy of man.” His words remain strikingly relevant in a landscape where collectors are increasingly aware of the difference between art made for markets and art made from the heart.

As a result, more Singaporeans are seeking artworks that feel unfiltered — pieces that are raw, daring, and shaped by lived experience. They want art that challenges familiar aesthetics, expands their understanding, and reveals truths often overshadowed by commercial cycles. They want what feels human.

Blurred sculptural image of distorted human faces pressing through a translucent surface, mouths open in silent screams. The haunting, raw expression reflects the kind of unfiltered, emotionally charged contemporary art that appeals to Singaporean collectors seeking authenticity beyond polished commercial aesthetics.
Credit: Printerest

This shift has given rise to a new generation of collectors who value sustainable art, mindful creation, and authenticity. These collectors are not drawn solely to technical perfection or visual appeal. They are searching for a connection. They gravitate toward works that hold emotional depth, convey genuine stories, reflect social and cultural realities, embrace sustainability, and uplift the voices of local artists.

For these collectors, art worth collecting is not defined by prestige or market trends, but by resonance — the unmistakable moment when an artwork reflects a hidden part of themselves or introduces a perspective they have never encountered before.

We prioritise meaningful stories over trends, depth over mass appeal, and long-term artistic growth over quick gain.

Phan Ling Gallery — Where Art Is a Relationship

At Phan Ling Gallery, art is more than a product. It is a relationship — a living conversation between creators, collectors, and the stories that pass between them. Behind every piece is an individual shaped by their environment, history, and inner world. We honour that humanity.

Our guiding philosophy is simple: authenticity first. We spend time with our artists, learn about their lives, and understand the beliefs and experiences that shape their work. Many of them experiment with sustainable materials or incorporate traditional methods like lacquer paint, techniques that hold cultural significance and reflect a commitment to mindful creation.

Artist Luong Duy in the process of creating a lacquer piece contemporary art.A Vietnamese artist carefully painting intricate details in his studio, surrounded by textured, story-rich contemporary artworks. The scene captures the raw, authentic, and mindful creation process that many Singaporean collectors seek—art rooted in lived experience, cultural depth, and sustainable craftsmanship.
Photo: Artist Luong Duy in the process of creating a lacquer piece. Credit: Phan Ling Gallery

By choosing artists with intention, we actively resist the pressures of rapid commercialisation and overconsumption that dominate parts of the global art scene. We prioritise meaningful stories over trends, depth over mass appeal, and long-term artistic growth over quick gain.

When collectors step into Phan Ling Gallery, they enter this intimate ecosystem. They are not simply purchasing an artwork — they are forming a relationship with an artist’s voice, their culture, and the experiences embedded within each layer of paint or texture. Through this connection, the artwork becomes more than decoration; it becomes a bridge between Vietnam and Singapore, carrying emotion, identity, and humanity across borders.

a contemporary artist Thu Tran and her Studio during the Xong Chu Xon Xao with the participation of minority women Tay ethinicity
Photo: Artist Thu Tran working in her studio as she prepares for the Xong Chu Xon Xao exhibition in collaboration with Tay minority women. Credit: Phan Ling Gallery and Thu Tran

Through ethical practices, respect for cultural traditions, and dedication to sustainability, we nurture an environment where art remains honest and alive. In our space, creation has intention. Art breathes. It speaks. And it connects.

Ready to discover contemporary art that truly moves you? Step into Phan Ling Gallery and experience a world of bold, authentic Vietnamese creativity brought to Singapore. Don’t just collect — connect. Start your journey with us and bring home contemporary art that inspires, surprises, and stays with you long after you leave.

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