Teng Nee Cheong, Untitled (Egret), 1979
Oil pastel and water colour on paper
26 x 20.5 cm
Condition: Fair, with foxing throughout the work.
Certificate of Authenticity from the Estate of Teng Nee Cheong available.
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Teng Nee Cheong (Singaporean, 1951–2013) studied at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (1966–1968) under the influence of mentors like Georgette Chen and Ng Yat Chuan. Throughout his career, Teng demonstrated mastery across oil, pastel and charcoal, though it is his intimate still lifes that reveal a quieter, more contemplative strand of his practice
In these early to mid‑career works, Teng imbued everyday produce with both formality and lyricism. Teng’s still lifes occupy an important place within his wider oeuvre, bridging his training in Nanyang figure and local landscape traditions with the more ornate, symbolic narratives he later developed. They demonstrate his capacity for attentive observation and formal refinement, serving as foundational studies in colour, shape and composition.
Teng’s early career laid the groundwork for what would become a highly individual and expressive body of work. In 1978, he received the Ministry of Culture Special Award, marking a moment of national recognition that affirmed his artistic direction. While he would go on to explore identity and queerness in later decades, his earlier works already signalled enduring interests in visual storytelling, ornamentation, and cultural synthesis—elements that would come to define his singular artistic language.
The White Egret symbolism holds profound meaning across various cultures; purity, grace, resilience, messengers of divine guidance and spiritual clarity, the elegant Egret inspires a deep connection to Nature and the pursuit of harmony, balance and personal freedom. This artwork has been in the artist's personal collection since 1981.
(Photographed in June 2025)