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In Perpetual Motion by Veronyka Lau

In Perpetual Motion

Veronyka Lau


Food creates memories, evokes emotions, delights the senses. It’s production however has no need of a statement and asks no questions. All we ask is that it nourishes and serves up some guilty pleasures. If food is not the art, the art is inadvertently in its making. 

In a hawker centre, none more high-stakes than in the modern business of ‘hawkering’ in  this 127 year-old octagon in the centre of the city, accomplished hawker hands in perpetual motion take centre stage in this public art installation. Their hands move with depth of experience, cultivated flair and an innate sense of their own rhythm and timing through a thousand often invisible acts of repetition to recreate deeply rooted textures and flavours.

The hands transfix as I document them in motion, and my conversations with the hawkers steer, amongst other chatter, to routine and repetition. Their schedules are demanding but it is too easy to equate routine with grind and the drowning of spirit and creativity. There is the idea of repetition and its relationship with intuition and mastery in art, in craft and in food. And the right routines create room for innovation, in any arena, and I find it here. As I draw their hands, I find in them a shared joy in doing something over and over, not because we always want to but because it approaches a feeling of connectedness that is an approximation of affection and achievement.

My afternoons have become a space for connection and curiosity as the hawkers wonder what interest an artist has with them. It is impossible to inhabit a space and not be stirred by the people in it.

M lets me into her kitchen one morning – her dance as she calls it, as she whirls around her small space cutting, chopping, steeping, simmering, preparing up to five dishes at one time in a well-worn routine. She has a vision of a future that keeps her boarding her ‘second home’, the MRT, before sunrise. 

In the bustle of changing faces and shifts is also Uncle T. He recounts his mastery of the craft that has become his life and livelihood. He acknowledges his ability to watch, listen, recreate taste and colour and make his own. But he laughs and shrugs when he is done. At his age, he is content in his intrinsic sense of self. He comes with a wealth of experience from delivery to restaurants to hawker stalls. He is a part of a hawker chain. What value do we as consumers, observers, place on his routine, his mastery, his livelihood? Ultimately, he calls himself a ‘calefe' in jest and says the grand opera that is the hawker business will carry on with or without him.

With sincere thanks to the hospitality and great food of the following hawker stalls for making this artwork possible:

Chinese La Mian, Xiao Long Bao (Stall 63)

Best Satay No. 7 & 8 (Stall 7 & 8)

Filipino Cuisine (Stall 72)

Fishball Noodle (Stall 7)

Fragrance Garden Chicken Rice (Stall 19)

Ming Kee Roasted Delight (Stall 4)

Seng Kee Local Delights (Stall 10)

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