top of page

EXHIBITIONS

The Disappearing Hills (2015 - Present)

The Disappearing Hills investigates the aftermath of the 2013 Bertam Valley floods in Cameron Highlands, speaking to illegal farmers, workers, environmentalists and flood victims.

www.disappearinghills.com

Exhibitions:
The Camera Museum, Georgetown (31 May 2015 - 31 June 2015)

KouGen Restaurant, Cameron Highlands (25 Dec 2015 - Present)

Library @ Orchard, Somerset 313 (March 2016 - June 2016)

Winner of the Special Jury Award

9th International Kuala Lumpur Eco Film Festival 2016

10550973_1455256291434057_32895993270794
10653770_1455260781433608_91361779710608
11393130_1455259074767112_91959883434821
11391305_1455466388079714_85545266487135
10342759_1455258781433808_85198208745989
11350626_1455468941412792_17854046082739
11289397_1455258778100475_40480083891786
11252458_1455467278079625_13554222617366
11168153_1455470511412635_68963088806490
11111212_1455469188079434_86168628942468
11040375_1455469414746078_20373037135257
kougen
BBDC-4.jpg

Singapore from Above (2015 - 2016)
 

Offering a look at Singapore From Above, this personal project highlights unusual glimpses of our island nation, from well-known icons, to our greening efforts and heartland hangouts. Kai Wen gives his take on how the environment has been shaped by nature and mankind within Singapore’s airspace.


Published on:
https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/singapore-from-above

Exhibitions:
The Singapore Botanic Gardens (2015)
URA Building (2016)

Also featured on BBC:
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-asia-37116815/drone-s-eye-the-curious-shapes-of-singapore-from-the-sky

BukitTimahGate-7
BukitTimahGate-8
BukitTimahGate-6
BukitTimahGate-3
BukitTimahGate-4
BukitTimahGate-1
BukitTimahGate-2
Nassim&TanglinGate-Web-9
Nassim&TanglinGate-Web-15
Nassim&TanglinGate-Web-6
Nassim&TanglinGate-Web-16
Nassim&TanglinGate-Web-10
Nassim&TanglinGate-Web
sgfromabove-uracentre-official-4574
FestiveHotel-1
01_ArtScience
06_SundialGarden
08_BotanicGardens
09_CityHall
08_BotanicGardens
17_MacRitchie_2
NgTengFong_2
vivocity-1
USS-1
sentosabroadwalk-2
BoatMuseum-1
BishanIntelCentre-1
BishanChurch-1
wkwsci-4
westmall-5
3043402024_d0055ebefa_o.jpg

The Demon in the Water (2008)
 

Water has always been a source of life for the Khmer. Over three million people, or a quarter of the population, live on the liquid that flows from the largest freshwater lake in Southeastern Asia— the Tonlé Sap. The most abundant source of protein for the nation is fish. Over two-thirds of their typical diet is made up of fish from the lake. More than a million literally live on the water— on numerous floating villages scattered across the lake.

The Demon in the Water photographic exhibition at VivoCity featured photographs by Yeo Kai Wen and Lee Xian Jie, as a result of a media expedition with Lien Aid in September, 2008


Published on:
https://yeokaiwen.exposure.co/the-demon-in-the-water

Exhibition:
Vivocity (2008)

2868190174_009603a99c_b
YKW_4262x
2853712618_e508c1555a_b
3043402024_d0055ebefa_o
3061715186_b5abc2e403_z
2850432655_b335663471_b
2853711260_1f98b5fa54_b
2851350772_b9a378a786_b
bottom of page