Jami (Gast)
| | Taking place over 18 to 26 August 2017 with a program that runs from 7.30 pm to 12 am, the Singapore Night Festival will transform the Bras Basah.Bugis Precinct into a midsummer's celebration, if you like.
This year the festival celebrates its 10th edition, and organizers are promising the romance and beauty of night lights, exhilarating performances and previous crowd favourites in a refreshing retrospective.
The Bras Basah.Bugis Precinct - also known as 'Be-Be-Be' - is the arts and heritage district in Singapore's Civic District or civic centre and is home to museums, historic monuments, heritage buildings, places of worship, arts schools and groups and lifestyle malls.
The National Museum of Singapore, Singapore Art Museum, Peranakan Museum, National Design Centre, Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts and the National Library are all located here, as is the Armenian Church of St. Gregory the Illuminator, Chinese and Hindu temples and colonial era buildings.
Bras Basah is one of Singapore's oldest districts and its name comes from the Malay term for the 'wet rice' that at one time would be laid out on the banks of Bras Basah River, what is today the Stamford Canal. In the 1820s in accordance with the vision for the town's growth of its founder Sir Stamford Raffles, the area was chosen to be the European part of town. The adjacent Bugis Street was named for the seafaring Bugis people from Indonesia who came to trade with local merchants.
The Singapore Night Festival sees a number of events hosted late into the night at places like the National Museum of Singapore and Singapore Art Museum. These two museums also happen to be at the centre of what is a major highlight of the Singapore Night Festival, when their facades are graced with interactive light installations.
Various street and music performances featuring local and international artists will entertain festival-goers, and the area's Armenian Street turns pedestrian-only for the festival.
For visitors still deciding on their hotel accommodation in Singapore for the Singapore Night Festival, there are various properties situated in and around the event vicinity ranging from backpacker and budget level to mid-range to 5 star luxury.
This includes a much-talked about new lifestyle hotel in Singapore, Hotel G Singapore, which when it opened in late 2016 heralded the arrival to the island of GCP Hospitality's lifestyle hotel brand known as Hotels G. This 308-room design-led hotel's address on Middle Road is ideal for those keen to experience as much of the Singapore Night Festival as possible, it being within comfortable walking distance of the National Museum of Singapore, Singapore Art Museum and the National Library.
It's also a central city location from where prime entertainment areas and attractions such as Marina Bay, major conference facilities and the Orchard Road and Bugis Street shopping areas are easily reached nearby.
And of the many hotels in Singapore near MRT (Mass Rapid Transit) stations, Hotel G Singapore is one of them, with Bugis and Dhoby Ghaut stations each a short walk from its front door. With an extensive network of stations around Singapore, the MRT makes for a good way to travel around and explore the destination.
Designed to meet the needs and desires of today's savvy and design conscious traveler, GCP Hospitality's new Singapore lifestyle hotel offers guests three types of guestroom (Good, Great and Greater) that blend style, practicality and fun, while property facilities include Ginett Restaurant & Wine Bar, 25 Degrees burger and liquor bar and a fitness centre modelled after old American boxing gyms.
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Moses (Gast)
| | Eagle-eyed viewers of the BBC's long running Fake or Fortune presented Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould were stunned this week to find that several episodes containing some of the show's more high-profile gaffes were missing from BBC iPlayer.
The programme, which sees Bruce and Mould work with art collectors to ascertain whether their pieces are genuine or fake, has been a ratings hit for the Beeb but there have been several mistakes incorporated into episodes.
In 2015, Fiona and the team famously tracked down an original Winston Churchill oil canvas painting only to conclude the episode on the understanding it was a fake.
The painting, which was owned by Charles Henty, depicted a picturesque scene of a medieval village in the south of France.
It was discovered in the coalhole of Charles' family home in London (which had once been owned by Churchill's daughter, Sarah) in the 1960s and was painted in Churchill's style but had never been authenticated.
The programme sees Fiona Bruce and Phillip Mould work with art collectors to ascertain whether their pieces are genuine or fake
The presenters failed to authenticate a genuine Winston Churchill painting
Episodes where gaffes occured have seemingly been removed from BBC iPlayer
After tracking down the village of St-Paul-de-Vence, Fiona and art expert Mould tried in vain to authenticate the sunny image with collector David Coombes stating categorically that he did not think the picture was by Winston Churchill.
Five years later, British artist Paul Rafferty uncovered a 'smoking gun' in the form of a thumbnail photograph Churchill painting the scene leading for the painting to be authenticated.
Just a year before the episode aired, a Churchill painting sold at Sotheby's for £1.8 million.
Another famous episodes in which the presenters authenticated a Monet painting which was later confirmed as a fake has also not been uploaded to the platform
In the 2011 episode, the team battled to have the Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil authenticated as an original Claude Monet only for them to be refused by the Wildenstein Institute
One of the most famous episodes in which the presenters authenticated a Monet painting which was later confirmed as a fake has also not been uploaded to the platform.
In the 2011 episode, the team battled to have the Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil authenticated as an original Claude Monet only for them to be refused by the Wildenstein Institute.
None of series 1 of the program has been uploaded to BBC iPlayer.
A BBC spokesperson said: 'All the decisions featured on Fake or Fortune are made in good faith by experts in the field based on the evidence available at the time of recording.'
An earlier version of this article may have suggested that the Lucian Freud painting which featured in an episode of Fake or Fortune was not genuine. We are happy to clarify that is incorrect and it has been officially authenticated as a genuine Lucian Freud.
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