The Singapore Art Museum (SAM) officially opened in 1996 to house an impressive collection of over 6,500 pieces of art and sculpture, most of it by Singaporean and Malay artists. Limited space requires the curators to display only a small number at a time, but these are incorporated in interesting exhibits to illustrate particular artistic styles, social themes, or historical concepts. A large collection of Southeast Asian pieces rotates regularly, as well as visiting international exhibits.
Besides the main halls, the museum offers up a gift shop with fine souvenir ideas, a cafe, a conservation laboratory, an auditorium, and the E-mage Gallery, where multimedia presentations include not only the museum’s own acquisitions but other works from public and private collections in the region as well. Once a Catholic boys’ school established in 1852, SAM has retained some visible reminders of its former occupants: above the front door of the main building you can still see inscribed “St. Joseph’s Institution,” and a bronze-toned, cast-iron statue of St. John Baptist de la Salle with two children stands in its original place.