Rani by Juliana Tan
Rani by Juliana Tan

More to Us

An exhibition by Juliana Tan, migrant domestic workers who volunteer with HOME, and Grace Baey and Denise Oliveiro

More to Us is a fundraising exhibition for HOME (Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics), featuring portraits created in collaboration with photographer Juliana Tan and migrant domestic workers who volunteer with HOME.


The showcase also includes a new video work by Grace Baey and Denise Oliveiro, capturing reflections on life in Singapore, hopes for the future, and the quiet resilience that sustains these women.


Another highlight is the winning creations from the 2025 Trashion Show, a competition where migrant workers transform trash into fashionable pieces of wearable art.

More to Us offers a humanising lens into the resilience, dignity, and aspirations of migrant domestic workers whose lives often remain unseen.

Join us for the opening night on 18 December, 7pm to 10pm, where HOME will share more about their important work and the stories of the women featured in the exhibition. HOME is raising $10,000 to support HOME’s essential services, including shelter, legal aid, and advocacy for workers who need it most.

Your presence and support make a real difference.

18/12/2025 - 21/12/2025
Objectifs Chapel Gallery

Related Event

Fundraising Event | Thu 18 Dec 2025, 7pm – 10pm

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About the Artists

Mary Bernadette Lee is based as an artist in Singapore. Her artistic practice takes the phenomenological approach investigating relationships between body, architecture and space, and psychological states relating to Self, Identity and Home. This relational dialectics between the physiological and the psychological is expressed through her works that foreground the architecture of her as a person and an artist. 


 Deanna Ng (b.1976) is a lens-based artist and arts educator, who observes and documents precious fragments of memories arising from the everyday, in her rapidly changing home, Singapore.

Having exhibited extensively in Japan, Turkey, Iceland and Singapore, she works on projects that examine not only her own memories and experiences, but also of the people and communities that she meets.

In 2009, her work with Lien Foundation on end-of-life issues left an indelible mark on her. From a storyteller about grief and loss to experiencing it herself, she turns her lens inwards to contemplate how grief becomes a part of her life and how to grow around it.

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