Please visit the National Library Board’s website for the latest opening hours
Woodlands Regional Library: 15 Apr - 31 May 2026
Sangkalan is a fictional island imagined by artist Brandon Tay. Through sculptures, textiles, and texts, the exhibition presents fragments of a lost culture shaped by its close relationship with nature. The installation unfolds as a growing archive, introducing visitors to the island’s ecosystem through three organisms: a fruit, an insect, and a bird. Together, they form the basis of how the inhabitants of Sangkalan understand their world.
At the centre of this imagined ecology is the Ta’Lur fruit, which produces shared hallucinations among those who consume it. These visions reflect the behaviour of two other species on the island: the Selantri insect and the Zaraun bird. The insect’s cycles of pollination and reproduction, together with the bird’s shifting songs and flight paths, allow the people of Sangkalan to perceive patterns within their environment and recognise changes across time. The colourful textiles on display function as a form of record-keeping. Instead of written language, they use colour, geometry, and repeating patterns to document environmental changes on the island.
Tay draws a parallel between this imagined ecosystem and blockchain technology, a digital system in which information is recorded and shared across a network rather than stored in a single place. On Sangkalan, knowledge is similarly distributed across the island’s fruit, insect and bird, forming a living system through which information about the environment is generated and remembered.
From April to October, Brandon Tay: Sangkalan will travel to National Library Board locations in Woodlands, Tampines, Jurong, and Punggol. With each presentation, the archive grows, gradually revealing the imagined history of the lost culture of Sangkalan. Through this fictional archive, the exhibition invites us to think differently about how we gather and process information through digital technologies. By prioritising the rhythms of the natural world, and not the logic of machines, the exhibition’s underlying narrative asks us to consider how our senses might record memory, and how such memories are understood, shared, and passed on.
Brandon Tay
Brandon Tay (b. 1981) is a Singaporean artist whose work explores the speculative potential of emerging technologies. In his practice, he engages with varying permutations of the moving image, experimental game cultures, generative AI and sculptural objects. Tay uses metafictional worldbuilding strategies to challenge common assumptions about how technology functions in our lives.
2026
Collection of the Artist; 3D-printed aluminum/resin, laser-cut steel, wood, printed acrylic, embedded media player; 80 x 60 × 45 cm;
ZAURAN (thin call/quiet loop) depicts the Zauran bird, a key part of the ecosystem on Tay’s fictional island of Sangkalan. Within this narrative, the Zauran bird reflects long-term changes in the island’s ecosystem through its shifting flight patterns and songs. For the inhabitants of Sangkalan, the songs of the Zauran bird are documented using a graphical notation that reflects long-term changes in environmental conditions. Extending Tay’s narrative metaphor between ecological systems and blockchain technology, the Zauran bird’s evolving flight patterns and songs, alongside the graphic notion used to document these changes, mirror the distributed ledger of transactions that is maintained by individual computers within the distributed blockchain network.
Artist impression of Brandon Tay's ZAURAN (thin call/quiet loop)
2026
Collection of the Artist; 3D-printed aluminum/resin, laser-cut steel, wood, printed acrylic, embedded media player; 80 x 60 × 45 cm;
SELATRI (ground pulse/quiet pattern) depicts the Selatri insect, a key part of the ecosystem on Tay’s fictional island of Sangkalan. Within this narrative, the Selatri insect provides a rhythm and regularity to the island’s ecosystem by pollinating the Ta’Lur fruit. The Selatri swarm responds to changes in the island’s closed ecological system, adjusting its behaviour to maintain balance. Extending Tay’s narrative metaphor between ecological systems and blockchain technology, the Selatri insect’s collective action mirrors the technical protocols that ensure consensus amongst individual computers within the distributed blockchain network.
Artist impression of Brandon Tay's SELATRI (ground pulse/quiet pattern)
2026
Collection of the Artist; 3D-printed aluminum/resin, laser-cut steel, wood, printed acrylic, embedded media player; 80 x 60 × 45 cm;
TA’LUR (dense breath/slow light) depicts the Ta’Lur fruit, a key part of the ecosystem on Tay’s fictional island of Sangkalan. Within this narrative, the Ta’Lur fruit produces a hallucinogenic sap during tidal cycles creating shared visions amongst the island’s inhabitants. Changing based on environmental conditions, these visions serve as a form of data visualisation that allows the people of Sangkalan to perceive subtle shifts in the island’s ever-changing ecosystem. Extending Tay’s narrative metaphor between ecological systems and blockchain technology, the Ta’Lur fruit’s ability to transform environmental data into a perceptual experience mirrors the encryption processes performed by individual computers within the blockchain network.
Artist impression of Brandon Tay's TA’LUR (dense breath/slow light)