11 must-see art events in Singapore in Q3 & Q4, 2026

Our pick of exhibitions and performances you can’t miss showing from now till the end of the year.

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Photo: Cloud Gate Dance Theatre
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Whoever said it’s boring here? Pencil these 11 events into your calendar. 

Moving on from the first half of the year, where we started off strong with Singapore Art Week, the second half of 2026 promises to be just as eventful.

From highly anticipated Southeast Asian premieres exclusive to Singapore, such as Australian artist CJ Hendry’s inflatable Juju World and Botero at the new IMBA Theatre, to modern interpretations of dance and movement from Taiwanese group Cloud Gate Dance Theatre. 

Here’s our round-up of events you can’t miss.

  1. 1. Juju World by CJ Hendry
  2. 2. Dracula
  3. 3. Zarina: Directions to My House
  4. 4. Botero: A Life in Fullness
  5. 5. David Hockey: Bigger & Closer (not Smaller and Further Away)
  6. 6. Hiroshi Sugimoto: Form Is Emptiness
  7. 7. Sounding Light by Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan
  8. 8. OSK Nippon Revue Company (OSK日本歌劇団) Revue Show!
  9. 9. Into the Ocean: Journey Beneath
  10. 10. Fear No Power: Women Imagining Otherwise
  11. 11. Crosscurrents: Masterpieces of Mughal, Safavid, and Ottoman Art from the Musée du Louvre

Juju World by CJ Hendry

Now till July 18, 2026, IMBA Theatre

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Photo: CJ Hendry Studio

Following the Southeast Asian exclusive of Flower Market, which drew crowds of Singaporeans, CJ Hendry debuts Juju World at the IMBA Theatre. This time, the Australian artist creates an inflatable experience based on her juju collectable series, transforming the IMBA Theatre’s gallery into a surreal, giant yellow universe.

It features an expansive inflatable playground, a massive sea of yellow balls, and whimsical interactive art spaces. Large-sized limited edition jujus will be available at the exhibition. 

Pre-registration is recommended. Get tickets here.

Dracula

July 15 to 19, 2026, Esplanade Theatres

art events sg
Photo: Dracula

Following its successful, sold-out runs in London’s West End and across Australia and New Zealand, the acclaimed Dracula production arrives in Asia for the first time in 2026.

This evocative performance explores themes of immortality, longing, and anguish, set to the music of legendary composers including Bach, Mozart, and Debussy.

Directed by choreographer Joel Burke, the show features a global ensemble cast with performers from prestigious companies such as the English National Ballet, Stuttgart Ballet, and the Mariinsky Theatre. The production is further distinguished by an original score from Emmy-winning composer Jason Fernandez and set designs crafted by the award-winning team at CTS (UK).

Get tickets here.

Zarina: Directions to My House

Now till August 1, 2026, STPI Creative Workshop & Gallery

art events sg
Photo: STPI

The largest solo exhibition in Southeast Asia dedicated to the late printmaker Zarina, who was known for her minimalist and diasporic practice. Curated by New York-based independent curator and the artist’s former studio manager, Sarah Burney, the exhibition showcases more than 50 works that reflect her life shaped by the many countries she lived in — Bangkok, New Delhi, Paris, Bonn, Tokyo, Santa Cruz, and New York.

The works map out delicate themes of home, borders, and displacement, featuring her signature minimalist paper works, delicate woodcuts, and geometric prints.

Admission is free.

Botero: A Life in Fullness

Now till August 31, 2026, IMBA Theatre

art events sg
Photo: Russel Wong/IMBA Theatre

Presented by the Fernando Botero Foundation, the exhibition is the first of its kind and the only stop in Southeast Asia.

Part of the larger Botero showcase, A Life in Fullness is a first immersive experience dedicated to the artist, a moving, 40-minute animated journey that navigates the deep personal memories and volumetric masterpieces of Colombian artist Fernando Botero. The living canvas experience is intimately narrated by his eldest son, Fernando Botero Zea.

Get tickets here.

David Hockey: Bigger & Closer (not Smaller and Further Away)

Now till August 31, 2026, IMBA Theatre

art events sg
Photo: IMBA Theatre

A grand-scale multi-sensory show tracking 60 years of Hockney’s iconic pop art career since the early 1960s. From painting, drawing, printmaking, set design, and photography to media ranging from fax machines to iPads, he combines them with his interest in modern technology to create new ways of seeing and presenting.

Immerse yourself in his work and see the world through his eyes to understand his philosophy, “Love Life”. Expect huge projections and an orchestral soundtrack that pull you into his vibrant, perspective-bending landscapes.

Get tickets here.

Hiroshi Sugimoto: Form Is Emptiness

Now till October 4, 2026, Singapore Art Museum (SAM)

art events sg
Photo: Singapore Art Museum

Taking after the Buddhist cosmological concept of the Five Elements, renowned Japanese artist Hiroshi Sugimoto’s first major survey exhibition in Southeast Asia is a look at 50 years of his multidisciplinary practice.

The layout mirrors a sacred Buddhist mandala, prompting viewers to slow down and ponder time as they walk through photography, sculpture, and large-scale installations.

Get tickets here.

Sounding Light by Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan

October 16 & 17, 2026, Esplanade Theatre

art events sg
Photo: Cloud Gate Dance Theatre

Cloud Gate Dance Theatre returns to Singapore with Sounding Light, an internationally acclaimed production that captures the fluid beauty of nature. Born from a post-pandemic exploration of sound and silence, this work by artistic director Cheng Tsung-lung draws inspiration from the forest’s atmosphere — the wind, birds, and insects — to examine the delicate relationship between humanity and the natural world.

The choreography depicts the passage of a single day, where changing light and rhythm shape the sense of time. Integrating live sound, the dancers perform as both musicians and movers, using voice, breath, and percussion to collaborate with composers Lim Giong and Chang Shiuan.

Through gestures mirroring natural elements such as rain and flowing water, the performance creates a sensory experience that seamlessly blends movement and sound. Since its 2024 debut in Germany, this celebrated work has been touring to global audiences.

Get tickets here.

OSK Nippon Revue Company (OSK日本歌劇団) Revue Show!

October 23 & 24, 2026, Singtel Waterfront Theatre at Esplanade

art events sg
Photo: OSK Nippon Revue Company

The legendary 102-year-old all-female troupe returns to Singapore following their successful showings in 2020 and 2025 at the Singtel Waterfront Theatre. Founded in Osaka in 1922, the ensemble is recognised as one of Japan’s revue institutions.

Top star Kazuki Tsubasa leads the cast in an elegant blend of dynamic choreography, song, and traditional male/female role-play, and will debut a special Singapore-exclusive number, Les Ailes.

Get tickets here.

Into the Ocean: Journey Beneath

Now till November 1, 2026, ArtScience Museum

art events sg
Photo: ArtScience Museum

Go on a deep-sea voyage at the ArtScience Museum, created in partnership with marine exploration organisation OceanX, one of the world’s leading ocean exploration organisations.

The multi-sensory exhibition weaves deep-ocean footage with real specimens, interactive elements, and oceanic smells, together with contemporary artwork by Marshmallow Laser Feast and Lachlan Turczan, to highlight ocean protection. Taking visitors from the surface to deep beneath the sea, Into the Ocean encapsulates the ocean’s wonder and mystery, just friendly enough for thalassophobes. 

Pre-registration is recommended. Get tickets here.

Fear No Power: Women Imagining Otherwise

Now till November 15, 2026, National Gallery Singapore

art events sg
Photo: National Gallery Singapore

Open since the start of the year, the Fear No Power exhibition is a thought-provoking collection at the National Gallery Singapore that highlights bold, radical artistic expressions by five Southeast Asian women — Singaporean Amanda Heng, Indonesian Dolorosa Sinaga, Filipino Imelda Cajipe Endaya, Malaysian Nirmala Dutt, and Thai Phaptawan Suwannakudt.  

Featuring over 50 works ranging from paintings, sculpture, photography, performance and archival material from the 1960s to 2010s, the exhibition spotlights how female creators challenge societal hierarchies and reimagine authority through art.

Admission is free.

Crosscurrents: Masterpieces of Mughal, Safavid, and Ottoman Art from the Musée du Louvre

Now till January 24, 2027, Asian Civilisations Museum

art events sg
Powder horn from 18th-century India made of ivory and copper alloy. (Photo: Department of Islamic Art, MAO 2257 2013 Musée du Louvre/Hughes Dubois)

A historic Southeast Asian premiere bringing over 100 exquisite treasures from the Musée du Louvre’s Islamic Art collection to the Asian Civilisations Museum (ACM), the exhibition traces how trade, diplomacy, migration and artistic exchange shaped the world from Istanbul to Southeast Asia.

Rare jades, ceramics, and metalwork, including 30 works from ACM’s own collection, showcase the artistic intersections linking the “Gunpowder Empires” to Southeast Asia. Many of the pieces are on display in Singapore for the first time, including an Ottoman jade cup from the royal collection of Louis XIV, previously displayed at the Palace of Versailles.

Admission is free for Singaporeans and PRs. Pre-registration is required.

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