A graphic novel about the history of Singapore stirred controversy before its publication, with a senior official in the city-state once warning that it could "potentially undermine the authority of legitimacy of the government and its public institutions."
But the Singaporean artist behind the book, Sonny Liew, continues to receive international praise.
But the Singaporean artist behind the book, Sonny Liew, continues to receive international praise.
Last Friday, Liew and “The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye”
bagged three Eisner awards — Best Writer/Artist, Best Publication Design, and
Best US Edition of International Material, Asia — having also been awarded, in
June, the best international comic at Denmark’s Pingprisen Awards.
Telling a more
inclusive story
Liew’s graphic novel features as its main characters,
Singapore’s first Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew and key opposition leader Lim
Chin Siong, and retraces key historical (and controversial) events that helped
shape the tightly controlled city-state, including violent strikes and bus
riots in 1955 and the detention without trial of left-wing politicians and
trade unionists in 1963 ahead of the break from the Malaya federation two years
later, as well as the alleged Marxist conspiracy of 1987.
Two years ago, the National Art Council of Singapore
withdraw a previously approved $$8,000 publishing grant for the novel citing
concerns over “sensitive content.” But on Monday, the NAC belatedly
congratulated Liew “on being the first Singaporean to bag three Eisner
awards,” and pointed out that while it had withdrawn the novel’s grant because
the content “infringed” funding guidelines,” Liew had continued to be
supported in various other ways. “For example, he enjoys subsidised arts
housing in the much sought-after Goodman Arts Centre.”
“The book is essentially a history of Singapore told
through the lens of a comic book artist called Charlie Chan, and while at first
it appears to be an art book of archives of his works, the readers will
discover it’s not quite what it seems,” the 42-year-old author explains in a
phone interview from San Francisco.
Beyond the political history, the novel is also a
celebration of “comics as a medium,” full of witty allusions to the work of
famous artists such as Osamu Tezuka’s Astro Boy, Walt Kelly’s Pogo and Frank
Miller’s “The Dark Knight Returns.
Moving Past the
Controversy
Liew says his book was not trying to replace the historic
narrative of Singapore, but was aiming to go beyond the “official” narrative to
tell a story that was “more inclusive and complex. I think that in itself
potentially upset them [the NAC], though they didn’t specify exactly what they
were not happy with, so I don’t want to speculate about it”
The wins at the Eisners, a highly prestigious award in
the industry, help bring the focus back to the quality of the work rather than
the grant pulled by the government agency. In its congratulation statement, the
NAC praised the “high artistic merit” of Liew’s novel.
But Liew remains concerned that the attention it has
received is a double-edge sword. “Without the withdrawal, the book wouldn’t
have received the social media attention it got and I wouldn’t have sold out
the initial print run in a week,” the artist admits, “But I worry about the
impact the controversy will have over the long term, for example about its chances
of being included in the school’s syllabus, and there are people out there that
will think the book is anti-government and it will color their views without
having read it.”
Liew is not the only writer who has faced funding issue
with the NAC. The agency also recently stopped in the middle of disbursing a
S$12,000 grant to Jeremy Tiang after he sent the Council the first draft of his
fiction about the leftist movement throughout Singapore’s history.
The Singapore art community has enjoyed strong financial
support from the government, but some have argued that state funding have also
be used as an censorship instrument.
In a parliamentary exchange last year, Parliamentary
Secretary Baey Yam Keng acknowledgef that “as part of the funding principles of
the NAC, there is a requirement and understanding with the arts groups and the
applicants that they should not put any public institutions in a bad light or
put them in a derogatory position.”
But critics have also argued that state funding being
taxpayer money should not be withheld from dissenting voices (Ong Keng Sen,
artistic director of the Singapore International Festival of Arts)
For Liew the main issue is the “wall of silence” that in
this case “prevents more dialogue about our history.”
He pointed that in the last two years, there had never
been “a clear response from the government about what they think about the
book, whether from the NAC or any MPs.”
“I’d hoped the book would open things up, but I think
it’s actually closed them a little bit. The NAC has become even more careful
about giving grants,” he notes, adding he viewed the lack of opportunities for
dialogues with the authority as the main challenge to moving forward.
As published for CNN Style (July 25, 2017)