Chong Fah Cheong


Chong Fah Cheong is a Singaporean sculptor known for many public sculptures in Singapore. Though he worked in a variety of styles from abstract to figurative, his name is identified with a series of figurative sculptures depicting the life of people living and working along the Singapore River.
Chong was born to a large family of a general practitioner. Since the age of four, he loved to draw and sketch, and displayed talent in art. In school this talent continued to shine, but he was never good with his academic subjects. At the age of 14, the young Chong decided to quit school after completing Form 3 education at the St. Joseph's Institution, to join the Lasalle Brothers novitiate in Penang. Chong spent the next 7 years with the teaching order, leading a cloistered life and training to be a teacher. In 1967, he returned to secular life and began his career as a school teacher in Teluk Anson in Malaysia. A year later, he left his job to read Social Science at the University of Singapore.
In 2001 Chong was commissioned by Wing Tai Holdings to create An Overture, a 3,700 tonne jade sculpture to be installed at the courtyard of the House of Tan Yeok Nee. The $80,0000 commission work began on 14 February that year, and unveiled at the House on 13 July 2001 to complement the finishing of the restoration work on the 115-year-old national monument, which was completed in September 2000 at a cost of $12 million.
In 2014, Chong was awarded the Cultural Medallion.

Gallery

Major exhibitions

DatesTitleLocation
1981WoodscapeAlpha Gallery
Singapore
1982Woodscape IILeon & Joel Galleries
Singapore
1984ExhibitionCitibank
Singapore
1985ExhibitionAlpha Gallery
Singapore
1992Sculptures in Wood, Stone & Bronze
Lasalle-SIA College of the Arts
Singapore
1992OpeningsStrand Gallery
Merritt, British Columbia
23 August -
28 August 1994
DreamcatcherThe Substation
Singapore
1996Prime Elements
Fort Canning Centre Gallery
Singapore
1996Recent Works
The Substation
Singapore
19 September -
20 October 1999
Handmade: Shifting Paradigms
Singapore Art Museum
Singapore