Where on this planet can you find a place that brings together two passions at once — art and shopping? Singapore provides the answer to this question in the form of Vivocity in the Harbourfront Precinct. Travelers in the hotels of Singapore will discover a building designed by world renowned architect Toyo Ito, in his first major project outside of Japan. Vivocity’s design is meant to evoke the idea of sea waves, and its home to entertainment and shopping businesses, providing an excellent environment in which to relax. As the largest retail center in Singapore, the shopping practically takes care of itself, but what about the art? There are six major works by international artists at Vivocity for its patrons to enjoy.
On the Harbourfront boardwalk, you’ll find a twenty foot tall sphere of flowers by Korea’s Choi Jeong-Hwa. Set among the Promenade’s trees, it brings a great deal of color to its setting. The Flower Tree causes people to stop and almost literally smell the flowers. From the Netherlands, Marc Ruygrok has created Gogo, a thirty-three foot tall rocket, colored a brilliant red, that greets patrons as they enter the parking area of Vivocity. It resembles a rocketship one might find in a science fiction B-movie from the 1950s. Then there’s an elongated Snowman, another tall work at forty-three feet, also on the Promenade, rising high above the second story terrace and looking into the third story Sky Park. Inges Idee from Germany has provided Vivocity with gigantic Snowflakes, each about three feet wide, sitting atop the Sky Park. Combining this art work with that of the Snowman, there’s a curious comment on nature, snowflakes and snowmen sitting in the tropics, the man-made version of these items lasting even in the warm 80 degree heat of Singapore.
If you’re of a more romantic frame of mind, you’ll discover Aphrodite’s Roses, a series of four giant rose blooms that serve as seating for the patrons, designed by Hiroshi Yoshimiza from Japan. The sculpture, There, by Netherland’s Henk Visch, depicts a gymnast going through a work out on a horizontal bar some twenty feet above the water. Finally, you have Vivo Punch, work created by Hong Kong’s Michael Cheung, also known as Punchman. His human-like figures are playful and colorful and add an extra level of energy to the Sky Park. For those engaged in the eternal struggle between art and commerce, they may find a merger of the two at Vivocity.