About us.

Jeremy Fernando

reads, writes, and makes things.

He works in the intersections of literature, philosophy,and art; and his, more than thirty, books include Reading Blindly, Living with Art, Writing Death, in fidelity, Tómate un paseo por el lado oscuro del camino, resisting art, Writing Skin, A Ghost Never Dies, and The feather of Ma’at.

His writing has also been featured in magazines and journals such as Arte al Límite, Berfrois, CTheory, Cenobio, Entropy, Full Bleed, Poiesis, positions, Philosophy World Democracy, Queen Mob’s Teahouse, Qui Parle, Testo e Senso, TimeOut, and Voice & Verse Poetry Magazine, amongst others; and has been translated into the Brazilian Portuguese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, and Serbian. Exploring other media has led him to film, music, and the visual arts; and his work has been exhibited in Seoul, Vienna, Hong Kong, and Singapore. He has been invited to read at the Akademie der Künste in Berlin in September 2016; and to deliver a series of performance-readings at the2018, 2020, and 2022 editions of the Bienal de la Imagenen Movimiento in Buenos Aires, the latter at which he also curated a filmic omnibus entitled reading dreaming malaya. He is the general editor of Delere Press; curates the thematic magazine One Imperative; is the Jean Baudrillard Fellow at The European Graduate School; and the writer-at and co-creator-of the private dining experience, People Table Tales.

Sara Chong

is a realist–figurative painter from and based in Singapore.

Her work has been exhibited in group-shows in Florence, London, and Singapore, and owned by several private collectors. She is also a commissioned portrait painter. Sara was trained predominantly at the Florence Academy of Art in Florence, Italy, from which she graduated in 2015, with an award for the Best Painting of the Year, and Best Figure Painting of the Advanced Painting Programme. Before immersing herself in classical training, she had a background in illustration, and puppet animation after the Czech masters. Empathy for the Monster/Beast is the main narrative feature of Sara’s work, be it in painting, animation or illustration. Her inspirations are coloured by the affectionate monsters of Odilon Redon, set in the acidic, ominous blue, of the skies of Giorgio de Chirico, and expressed in the hands of Rodin. She paints characters and situations that reflect on the idea of the awkward Beast in the land of beauty. She is ever curious about the concept of the Monster/Beast in myth and daily life, especially where the Beast, most often a cultural or social construct, has its own story and its own rejected version of humanity.

‘were it that easy’ & ‘dinner for one’ © Jeremy Fernando
Paintings © Sara Chong
Photographs © Jeremy Fernando
Recipes © Sara Chong & Jeremy Fernando