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This striking work by Lim Tze Peng captures the maritime soul of Singapore at Tanjong Rhu, a once-bustling riverside enclave that played a vital role in the nation’s early trade and shipbuilding history.


Originally rendered in the 1980s and later enriched with colour in 2020, the painting bridges two moments in time — the immediacy of observation and the reflection of memory. The tall masts and rigging dominate the composition, rising vertically like silent witnesses to an era when the river was alive with commerce, labour, and movement.


Lim’s expressive ink lines give structure and rhythm to the boats, while the later application of colour introduces a renewed vitality — luminous washes of turquoise, ochre, and warm earth tones evoke both water and atmosphere. This interplay between ink and colour is not merely aesthetic; it reflects the artist’s evolving dialogue with his own past, revisiting and reinterpreting earlier works with the wisdom of time.


Unlike static depictions of landscape, this piece pulses with energy. The clustered vessels, layered lines, and fluid background create a sense of motion and density — a living memory of Singapore’s maritime heritage before its transformation into a modern skyline.


For collectors, this work holds particular significance. It embodies:

  • A rare subject — Tanjong Rhu, a historically rich but less commonly depicted locale

  • A dual-period narrative — original 1980s execution with contemporary colour intervention

  • A mature artistic language — where line, abstraction, and memory converge

  • A cultural document — preserving Singapore’s riverine and seafaring past

More than a depiction of boats, this painting is a meditation on time, labour, and transformation — a visual echo of a Singapore that has largely receded from view.


Collector Significance

  • Period Importance: Rooted in the 1980s, revisited in 2020 — spanning decades of artistic evolution

  • Subject Matter: Maritime Singapore — trade, vessels, and river life at Tanjong Rhu

  • Rarity: Works depicting lesser-known riverfront areas are highly sought after

  • Artistic Value: Dynamic linework combined with expressive, later-applied colour

  • Narrative Depth: A rare dialogue between past observation and present reflection


Closing Line

To acquire this work is to possess not just an image, but a layered memory of Singapore’s maritime past — seen through the evolving vision of one of its most important artistic chroniclers.

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Singapore River

Tanjong Rhu Riverside

Chinese Ink and Colour on Rice Paper

1980s (Colours added in 2020)

680 x 670 mm

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