Contemporary Art Galleries in Singapore
A curated perspective on the gallery ecosystem shaping contemporary art in Singapore.
Much of the commercial gallery activity here belongs to galleries headquartered elsewhere, which makes Singapore less a producer of homegrown dealers than a regional anchor where Asian and Western galleries open outposts. The clearest evidence sits in Gillman Barracks, a cluster of former military blocks that concentrates the bulk of the city's serious commercial spaces and reads as the closest thing to a gallery district. A second pole has grown around the warehouse floors of Tanjong Pagar Distripark, where high ceilings and large footprints suit ambitious installation and sculpture, and where Gajah Gallery has built a sustained program around Indonesian and Southeast Asian practice. Between these poles, the galleries that carry weight are those running curatorial rather than purely transactional programs, treating the local collector base and the January fair calendar as a way into the broader Southeast Asian field. The character that emerges rests on infrastructure and positioning more than on a crowded independent or experimental scene.
Explore Singapore
A local guide to Singapore, with links to its galleries, institutions, and wider Singapore art context.
Gallery Districts in Singapore
Key areas where contemporary art galleries are concentrated across the city.
Gallery space concentrates in two purpose-built sites the state helped engineer rather than in any organically grown art quarter. The larger sits west at Gillman Barracks, low-rise colonial military blocks handed to international and regional commercial galleries, where greenery and verandas slow the walk between rooms and the tenants skew toward established programs with global reach. A harder-edged counterpart runs out of Tanjong Pagar Distripark, a working port warehouse near the southern waterfront whose high ceilings suit large-format painting, sculpture and installation, shared by a few ambitious galleries and relocated museum programming.
Beyond these anchors the distribution loosens into a scatter. Smaller, more independent operations occupy conservation shophouses across older districts, from Kampong Gelam to the River Valley stretch and the Art Deco streets of Tiong Bahru, with a few rooms persisting in the heritage barracks of Dempsey Hill. These spaces back emerging and local practice, run project-based or research-led programs, and work at a domestic scale the engineered precincts avoid, leaving the city with a gallery map divided between concentrated, market-facing hubs and a thinner spread of experimental activity threaded through preserved urban fabric.
Galleries in Singapore
A selection of contemporary art galleries operating across different areas of Singapore.
Ames Yavuz
Commercial gallery in Singapore with an international program rooted in Southeast Asian, Australian, and global contemporary art, operating from Gillman Barracks with a strong cross-regional outlook.
It strengthens Singapore’s role as a bridge between Southeast Asian practices and wider international circuits.
Cuturi Gallery
Cuturi Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in Singapore supporting emerging and mid-career artists, with a collector-facing program that emphasizes painting, sculpture, and accessible contemporary practices.
It contributes to the city’s younger gallery ecology by foregrounding new collecting audiences.
FOST Gallery
Based in Gillman Barracks, FOST Gallery presents contemporary art by Singaporean and international artists, with a program attentive to conceptual practice, material experimentation, and regional dialogue.
Its sustained program gives Singaporean artists a precise position within regional contemporary discourse.
Gajah Gallery
Established gallery in Singapore with a strong Southeast Asian program, Gajah Gallery represents artists including Ashley Bickerton and Yunizar and also operates internationally through its Yogyakarta-based initiatives.
It has helped consolidate Southeast Asian contemporary art within both Singapore and international markets.
Mizuma Gallery
Mizuma Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in Singapore connected to a wider Asian network, presenting artists from Japan, Southeast Asia, and beyond through exhibitions and international art fair activity.
It positions Singapore within a trans-Asian gallery circuit rather than a purely local market.
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
International commercial gallery in Singapore presenting contemporary artists across painting, sculpture, photography, and installation, with a program shaped by cross-cultural exchange and a wider global gallery network.
It adds a cosmopolitan, collector-oriented layer to Singapore’s gallery landscape.
This is a curated selection. Explore the full network of contemporary art venues on the map.