Illustration



Illustration /

Malay Heritage Board Mural



Mural & Illustration
Client: Malay Heritage Board
Year: 2024–2025

Role: Illustration & mural design
Fabrication: Sticker fabrication by GreenQubes


Paying homage to Georgette Chen’s Malay Wedding (above)
Designed a large-scale mural celebrating the joy, rhythm, and richness of a traditional Malay wedding for Malay Heritage Board. The work draws inspiration from Georgette Chen’s Malay Wedding, reinterpreting its spirit through a playful, graphic visual language rooted in colour, movement, and pattern.

The mural features symbolic elements such as the kompang, bunga manggar, keris, and silat, illustrated with bold forms and rhythmic compositions that echo the energy of wedding processions and communal celebration. Jawi script, spelling Walimatul Urus, commonly seen on Malay wedding invitations, was incorporated as a familiar cultural marker anchoring the work in lived tradition.

Figures and motifs are framed like vintage stamps, allowing each scene to stand alone while contributing to a larger narrative. The composition invites viewers to move across the mural, encountering fragments of ceremony, craft, and gesture that collectively celebrate heritage through a contemporary lens. The project explores how traditional customs can be honoured while remaining dynamic, accessible, and visually alive in a public setting.




Motion /

MTV Environment Ident



Climate Mobility Animation


Illustration & Motion
Client: MTV International
Year: 2023

Role: Illustration
Animation: Eric Foenander

Developed an illustrated motion piece exploring sustainable urban mobility and climate responsibility. The animation was inspired by a recent trip to Amsterdam, where cycling is a primary mode of transport and a visible part of the city’s approach to reducing environmental impact.

Cycling is central to Amsterdam’s climate strategy, demonstrating how everyday infrastructure choices can meaningfully lower emissions while improving quality of life. Research indicates that if people globally cycled at the same rate as the Dutch, nearly 700 million metric tons of carbon dioxide could be reduced annually—an amount comparable to Germany’s total emissions. This balance between environmental efficiency and liveability informed the visual direction of the work.

The animation subtly references Doughnut Economics, a model adopted by Amsterdam that seeks to meet essential human needs while remaining within planetary boundaries. A doughnut motif is embedded into the landscape as a quiet visual cue to this framework in practice. Bees appear throughout the animation as symbols of biodiversity and ecological interdependence, reinforcing the idea that environmental health relies on connected systems rather than isolated solutions.

Designed to communicate complex ideas through accessible, motion-led illustration, the work contributes to broader conversations around climate action, urban design, and collective responsibility. The animation was screened internationally, including at COP28 in Dubai.



Animation /

Somerset Threads



Branding Design & Animation
Client: *SCAPE / Somerset Threads
Year: 2021

Role: Animation & branding design
Scope: Visual identity, animated assets, environmental application


Developed the branding design and animation for Somerset Threads, an arts and public-engagement initiative presented by *SCAPE as part of Singapore Design Week and Somerset Belt programming. The project formed part of a district-wide experience that combined murals, storytelling, and interactive elements across Orchard Road and the Somerset Belt, activating youth-oriented creative narratives in public space.

The visual system and animation were designed to complement the programme’s exploratory nature, translating the energy of place, community, and creative exchange into motion-ready brand assets that could be applied across signage, digital screens, wayfinding, and event collateral. By using dynamic motion and adaptable graphic language, the work supported a broader strategy of engaging audiences through both physical activation and visual interaction.

The Somerset Threads experience invited visitors to discover art and stories embedded in the Somerset district, connecting murals, installations, and theatrical elements in a living design trail that blurred the boundaries between public artwork and storytelling.