CNN  — 

With their pleasing colors and playful compositions, Nguan’s images of Singapore portray the city-state as a dreamy wonderland. But this is somewhat at odds with the photographer’s view of his hometown as a high-functioning but sterile place.

So Nguan, who goes by his given name, subverts the city’s reputation by turning his lens on older parts of the city.

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Nguan's photos often addressed the rapid pace of change in Singaporean society.

“Singapore is clean and efficient but you don’t feel anything when you think of the country,” said Nguan in a phone interview. “Nobody would refer to (it) as beautiful.

“I wanted Singapore to look like an illustrated fairy-tale.”

Since returning from studying filmmaking in the US in 2007, the photographer has been capturing neglected corners of the country, from its hawker centers to pastel-colored spiral staircases.

Using a film camera from the ’90s, Nguan combines documentary techniques with the aesthetics of fashion photography. His dream-like photos have appeared in two reportedly sold-out photo books (“How Loneliness Goes” and “Singapore”), at international photography fairs and even The New Yorker’s Instagram account, which he took over for his country’s National Day in 2016.

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Photographer Nguan captures the surreal beauty of Singapore in order to romanticize his homeland.
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"Singapore is clean and efficient but you don't feel anything when you think of the country," said Nguan in a phone interview.
Nguan
His pastel-colored photos have appeared in overseas exhibitions.
Nguan
Nguan portrays a different side to the "sterile" city-state -- one that represents the lives of everyday people.
Nguan
He is particularly fond of picturing corridors in public housing blocks, as they contain evidence of the complex lives unfolding within, he said.
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"Every corridor is like a street on its own," he explained.
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In one photo, a colorful array of clothes and towels in the corridor are soaking up the sunset.
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"Much is beautiful and much is broken, and the entire city is haunted," Nguan said, of his interpretation of the city through photography.
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He also looks to nature, frequently picturing the bougainvillea flowers whose bright hue is now known as "Singapore pink."
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Another recurring motif in Nguan's photos is the colorful plastic chairs commonly seen at hawker centers, religious festivals, weddings and funerals.
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One photo shows a woman eating alone at a hawker center.
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"The rapid development of the city has led to collective nostalgia among Singaporeans because the country they remember is gone (or) going very quickly," said Nguan.
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This unease is embodied by Geylang, a notorious red light district where neon-lit brothels stand amid seafood restaurants and Buddhist temples.
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Yet, this rapidly gentrifying area retains vestiges of the past in the form of shophouses, a style of colonial building found throughout Southeast Asia.
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"Singapore is a city raised up from jungle and I wanted to show that our true nature cannot be paved," said the photographer. "I think it's how we are -- we are wondering parts and we are restless by nature."

Ode to the unseen

The towering Marina Bay Sands resort may be Singapore’s most recognizable symbol, but Nguan depicts a different side to the city-state – one that represents the lives of everyday people.

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According to government research, over 80% of the country’s population lives in public housing estates. Many of them are found in areas known as the heartlands, satellite towns on the outskirts of the city – places that Nguan’s work largely focuses on.

He is particularly fond of picturing corridors in public housing blocks, as they contain evidence of the complex lives unfolding within, he said.

“Every corridor is like a street on its own,” he explained.

In one photo, a half-naked and barefooted man tends to plants outside a door adorned with Chinese lanterns. Another shows a colorful array of clothes and towels in the corridor soaking up the sunset.

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"Every corridor is like a street on its own," said Nguan.

“Many (residents) treat the corridor areas outside their apartments as their own, taking great pride with decorations, placing religious altars on pillars, installing rows of potted plants and drying their undergarments outside,” explained Nguan.

These can all be seen as tiny acts of gentle rebellion, the photographer suggested, as housing regulations often state that residents should keep common areas free of clutter.

“It’s also a distinctly Singaporean trait to carry on with whatever you can get away with,” he added.

“As long as the authorities close one eye.”

Redefining national icons

Nguan sees Singapore as an adolescent nation in a state of inbetweenness. There is, he said, both a longing for the past and concern about the future.

“The rapid development of the city has led to collective nostalgia among Singaporeans because the country they remember is gone (or) going very quickly,” he added.

This unease is embodied by Geylang, a notorious red light district where neon-lit brothels stand amid seafood restaurants and Buddhist temples. Nguan, who often features the neighborhood in his photographs, referred to it as “the final bastion of unruliness in Singapore.”

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Nguan's photos focus on parts of Singapore that "you wouldn't normally see in the conventional narrative."

Yet, this rapidly gentrifying area retains vestiges of the past in the form of shophouses, a style of colonial building found throughout Southeast Asia. The photographer said that, since childhood, he has been “obsessed with” the staircases often found behind the structures.

The ethereal stairways (which were first built to facilitate the night-time removal of human waste), regularly appear in Nguan’s photos. In one striking image, he pictures a row of identical shophouses from behind, their spiral staircases painted in a vibrant mix of blue, green and yellow.

These colorful architectural features face an uncertain future, however. Not all of the staircases are protected by the country’s conservation regulations, and those featured in Nguan’s aforementioned photo might be demolished when the buildings fall into public hands next spring.

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Nguan often captures the spiral stairacases found at the back of Singapore's shophouses.

Another recurring motif in Nguan’s work is the colorful plastic chairs commonly seen at hawker centers, religious festivals, weddings and funerals. But he also looks to nature, frequently picturing bougainvillea flowers whose bright hue is now known as “Singapore pink.”

“Singapore is a city raised up from jungle and I wanted to show that our true nature cannot be paved,” said the photographer. “I think it’s how we are – we are wondering parts and we are restless by nature.”