Singapore International Festival of Arts 2025 returns on May 16 with the theme ‘More Than Ever’, connecting communities through culture

Pact of Water, SIFA 2025
A scene from Pact of Water, one of the performances at SIFA 2025. Image courtesy: Arts House Limited

There is more than ever on the art and culture platter of Singapore this summer.

The annual Singapore International Festival of Arts (SIFA) returns from 16 May to 1 June with the theme ‘More Than Ever’. Organised by Arts House Limited (AHL) and commissioned by the National Arts Council (NAC), this 2025 edition of Singapore’s top festival of performing arts presents a dynamic line-up.

As Singapore celebrates its 60th year of independence, SIFA marks an exciting chapter with its largest showcase of homegrown talent.

Early bird tickets for SIFA 2025, which offer audiences savings of 20 per cent, are on sale from 11 March to 14 April 2025. For more information, visit https://sifa.sg/

It is designed to bring the arts everywhere, for audiences of all ages, and across diverse communities, establishing Singapore’s identity as a creative city for the arts.

Building on the theme, six curation strands guide SIFA 2025 and its programming: New Urban Realities; Classics Reinvented; History Reimagined; We, International; State of the Arts; and PRISM 48.

SIFA 2025 Festival Reveal event. Photo courtesy: Arts House Limited

Unveiled by Festival Director Natalie Hennedige at Fort Canning Centre, SIFA 2025 will present an unprecedented number of 15 commissioned local works — the highest number in the Festival’s history — including two works-in-progress first staged at SIFA 2024.

In line with efforts to increase accessibility for audiences from all walks of life, the Festival will also feature the SIFA Pavilion at Bedok Town Square, a transient arts space in the heart of the community that is charged with multidisciplinary artistic expression.

With an emphasis on public engagement, the SIFA Pavilion is an arts touchpoint in everyday spaces where Singaporeans live, work and play.

This year’s edition also sees the return of Little SIFA, situated at Empress Lawn, featuring works by Singapore artistes, including an installation encompassing performance, and specially designed arts experiences for families and children.

Through embedding arts experiences in key life areas, Little SIFA complements efforts to foster an appreciation for the arts in children from a young age.

Furthering its international standing, the Festival also continues to feature a compelling line-up of invited presentations, and a new international commission. These presentations support the development of a globally connected performing arts landscape in Singapore.

Sharon Tan, Executive Director, Arts House Limited
Sharon Tan, Executive Director, Arts House Limited, at the SIFA 2025 Festival Reveal. Photo courtesy: Arts House Limited

Sharon Tan, Executive Director of Arts House Limited, said, “SIFA 2025 is a celebration of Singapore’s cultural vitality and growth, presenting heartfelt stories that resonate deeply with local and international audiences. Through the theme More Than Ever, we aim to create powerful shared moments of connection and reflection, honouring the Festival’s 48-year journey. We continue to make the arts more accessible by enlivening everyday community spaces with artistic encounters, and championing homegrown talent and showcasing Singapore’s creative spirit in fresh and impactful ways.”

Reflecting on the theme, Festival Director Natalie Hennedige shared, “In a world afflicted with the rhetoric of divide, More Than Ever, we need to resist limiting binaries and relate to each other in nuance. In doing so, we uphold the station of the Arts as a vital space in society that explores differences in opinions, accepts otherness and maintains the past, present, and future as entities that perpetually influence and shape each other, engendering new narratives on a supple timeline that moves forward, cyclically or in any imaginable configuration.” 

Low Eng Teong, Chief Executive Officer of NAC, said, “SIFA stands as a beacon of both local and international significance, bringing together the excellence of artistic practices to capture the pulse of our vibrant arts scene. Locally, we aim for the arts to be infused everywhere and for the public to be more engaged with the arts. Internationally, as Singapore continues to build our position as one of the key arts hubs in Asia, the Festival also underscores our capacity to facilitate critical discourse and meaningful connections through the transformative power of the arts.” 

Experience the performing arts in new and unexpected ways 

Against the backdrop of Singapore’s 60th anniversary, SIFA 2025 celebrates the nation’s evolving cultural identity by positioning Singapore artistic expression at the fore, while expanding global perspectives with the invitation of distinct international artistes.

Over the course of the three-week Festival, the SIFA Pavilion at Bedok Town Square is hosting multiple works that bring performance and the public together. These works include:  

The Sea and the Neighbourhood, SIFA 2025
The Sea and the Neighbourhood. Photo courtesy: Brian Gothong Tan

SIFA’s opening performance The Sea and the Neighbourhood is a multidisciplinary work inspired by Bedok’s coastal heritage, neighbourhood charm, and modernity. Anchored by a coral-inspired installation doubling as a stage, the presentation transforms the space into an artistic gathering of multidisciplinary expression featuring visual artist Wang Ruobing, composer Philip Tan, choreographer Christina Chan with Singapore Ballet, and video artist Brian Gothong Tan. Curated by SIFA, this large-scale work captures the ebb and flow of Singapore’s collective past, present, and future.

● Inspired by Singapore’s coral reefs and the nation’s ambitious reef restoration efforts, visual artist Wang Ruobing’s large-scale installation explores sustainability, climate resilience, and what it means to be a liveable island. Known for her environmentally minded works, Ruobing’s installation captures the public’s imagination as both an installation and a performance stage. 

Singapore theatre company Drama Box’s hello, is this working? builds on its work-in-progress showing at SIFA 2024’s Tomorrow and tomorrow platform. This interactive work invites audiences to reflect on the future of work and challenge societal narratives about labour. It also reflects the Festival’s intent to encourage diverse ways of experiencing performance.

Connecting younger audiences to the arts 

Little SIFA returns for its second edition, setting up camp at Empress Lawn and offering a curated series of family-friendly programmes by homegrown talent spanning two weekends.

Little SIFA expands its scope to feature diverse art forms, including The House Between the Winds by Singapore artist Yang Jie. Set within a kinetic soundscape installation and performance, the work recalls the plantations that gave Orchard Road its name and the selfless trees that sustained its people.  

The House Between the Winds, SIFA 2025
The House Between the Winds by Singapore artist Yang Jie. Image courtesy: Arts House Limited

Continuing the Festival’s efforts to introduce young audiences to the arts, festival-goers may experience a 30-minute adaptation of The Finger Player’s Animal Farm, where George Orwell’s iconic characters come to life in an unexpected setting. This production offers two unique experiences: the full theatrical presentation at the SOTA Drama Theatre and a free variation of the piece performed outdoors at Empress Lawn.

In addition to these key works, Little SIFA aims to provide children with exposure to and engagement with Singapore’s vibrant arts landscape from young, by offering a range of activities and performances, from puppetry to film, to facilitate memorable art encounters. 

Homegrown talents shine at SIFA 2025 

SIFA stays committed to nurturing local talent and providing them with an international platform to reach more audiences, spotlighting Singapore artistes through commissioned presentations. These commissions include:  

Waiting for Audience: Originally presented as a work-in-progress at SIFA 2024 as part of Tomorrow and tomorrow, this piece by Nine Years Theatre now occurs in its next iteration. Directed by Nelson Chia and Mia Chee, it explores the enduring vitality of theatre as an ancient art form, delving into the challenges of artistic creation and the timeless adage that theatre reflects society.

COLONY – A True Colors Project: Directed by Remesh Panicker, this dance production features 13 diverse dancers from Singapore, Indonesia, Cambodia, Thailand, the Philippines and Japan. Seamlessly blending live performance with raw, unscripted rehearsal room footage, COLONY explores the challenges and possibilities of diversity in human society, and celebrates the individual within an interconnected, inclusive “colony” of souls. 

LEAR: Glasgow-based Singaporean artiste Ramesh Meyyappan transforms Shakespeare’s classic through visual and physical storytelling. Collaborating with Scotland’s Raw Material, Ramesh explores the fractures in familial relationships and the corrosive effects of a patriarch’s deteriorating body and mind. 

Animal Farm: Presented by The Finger Players,it breathes new life into George Orwell’s iconic tale. This adaptation, directed by Oliver Chong, fuses masterful puppetry with rich theatrical storytelling to offer a fresh, visually stunning take on Orwell’s cautionary parable. 

Umbilical: Presented by Rizman Putra, Zul Mahmod, and thesupersystem,the story of an island unfolds across time, navigating the interplay between natural forces and human ingenuity. This evocative work captures pivotal moments of transformation from ancient history to a speculative future.

The Festival also features PRISM 48, a conversation series curated by writer, editor, and producer Hong Xinyi. Titled to reflect the multifaceted perspectives shaping Singapore’s evolving cultural identity anchored on shared arts and culture, PRISM 48 explores our understanding of ourselves and our region, and the nation’s place within global artistic circuits.

A range of thinkers and cultural advocates, who work both locally and regionally, will be in dialogue about topics such as What Difference Can Singapore Storytelling Make, exploring and reframing cultural narratives through the performing arts and beyond.  

International perspectives at SIFA 2025 

As part of the offerings catering to various audiences, SIFA 2025 also presents a distinct line-up of international works by artistes creating with strong individual voices globally. 

A scene from HOME, SIFA 2025
A scene from HOME. Photo courtesy: Hillarie Jason

HOME by Geoff Sobelle: This is a moving meditation on the relentless passage of time and a breathtaking spectacle of illusion, choreography, music, and storytelling that explores the everyday drama of what makes a house a home. 

Lebanese dancer Ali Chahrour, SIFA 2025
Lebanese dancer and choreographer Ali Chahrour. Screeshot courtesy: Arts House Limited

Lebanese dancer and choreographer Ali Chahrour: Presents the second part of his trilogy on love in Told by My Mother, drawing inspiration from his family history and a fractured Lebanon. Joined by actress Hala Omra and the musicians of Two or The Dragon, the performance blends movement, song, and music rooted in Arab culture and urban sounds, evoking the deep and complex love between a mother and her child.

A scene from the mockumentary Vampyr, SIFA 2025
A scene from the mockumentary Vampyr. Photo courtesy: Franco Barrios

Chilean playwright Manuela Infante brings Vampyr: This is a mockumentary that blends black humour with commentary on energy, labour, and environmental concerns. Set in Chile’s unregulated wind turbine parks, it follows shapeshifting creatures — half-human, half-animal — offering a perspective that bridges European myths and the plight of Chile’s hematophagous bats. Vampyr explores the relationship between non-humans (read: animals) and how we engage with their cultures in the context of mankind’s energy ambitions for the future.