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From the Archives: The Work of Photographer KF Wong

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People

7 July 2019

K.F. Wong shot to international fame with his images of Borneo, though not without controversy. Zhuang Wubin examines Wong’s work and sees beyond their historical value.

K.F. Wong’s photo of two bulls pulling a turf roller at the Padang in 1946 clinched the top prize in the 1987 Historical Photographs Competition organised by the National Archives of Singapore. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

K.F. Wong’s photo of two bulls pulling a turf roller at the Padang in 1946 clinched the top prize in the 1987 Historical Photographs Competition organised by the National Archives of Singapore. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

Photographer K.F. Wong. Image reproduced from Wong, K.F. (1979). Borneo Scene (p. 9). Kuching: Anna Photo Company. (Call no.: RSEA q959.52 WON).

Photographer K.F. Wong. Image reproduced from Wong, K.F. (1979). Borneo Scene (p. 9). Kuching: Anna Photo Company. (Call no.: RSEA q959.52 WON).

The poster publicising K.F. Wong’s solo exhibition, “Light on Historical Moments – Images on Singapore”, organised by the National Archives of Singapore in 1989. The exhibition featured 159 photographs on Singapore that Wong had taken from the mid-1940s to the 60s. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

The poster publicising K.F. Wong’s solo exhibition, “Light on Historical Moments – Images on Singapore”, organised by the National Archives of Singapore in 1989. The exhibition featured 159 photographs on Singapore that Wong had taken from the mid-1940s to the 60s. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

A Self-made Photographer

Making His Mark

Photographing the Indigenous Peoples

(Clockwise from top left) A Dayak mother and daughter; an Iban in full war costume – complete with a ceremonial headdress of hornbill feathers and silver belts and chains – performing a war dance; a Kayan girl separating padi husk from rice in her longhouse; and an Iban wedding couple. Dayak or Dyak is a loose term for the more than 200 ethnic sub-groups in Borneo – Iban, Kayan and Punan being just three examples. Images reproduced from Wong, K.F. (1960). Pagan Innocence. London: Jonathan Cape. (Call no.: RCLOS 991.12 WON-[GBH])

(Clockwise from top left) A Dayak mother and daughter; an Iban in full war costume – complete with a ceremonial headdress of hornbill feathers and silver belts and chains – performing a war dance; a Kayan girl separating padi husk from rice in her longhouse; and an Iban wedding couple. Dayak or Dyak is a loose term for the more than 200 ethnic sub-groups in Borneo – Iban, Kayan and Punan being just three examples. Images reproduced from Wong, K.F. (1960). Pagan Innocence. London: Jonathan Cape. (Call no.: RCLOS 991.12 WON-[GBH])

Two Landmark Photobooks

Scenes of Singapore

A roadside Chinese herbal tea stall in Chinatown, 1962. Photograph by K.F. Wong. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

A roadside Chinese herbal tea stall in Chinatown, 1962. Photograph by K.F. Wong. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

A Chinese street storyteller regaling his enraptured audience with legends, folktales, Chinese classics and martial arts stories by the Singapore River, 1960. Photograph by K.F. Wong. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

A Chinese street storyteller regaling his enraptured audience with legends, folktales, Chinese classics and martial arts stories by the Singapore River, 1960. Photograph by K.F. Wong. Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

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