Can postcards really show what a place is truly like, or do they always reflect the tourist’s point of view?

While postcards may be less popular in today’s digital age, they have long been a way for travellers to share their experiences with loved ones. Yet when you look closely, these seemingly idyllic landscapes and cultural landmarks are often obscured and distanced from their reality.

In 1990, sociologist John Urry introduced the concept of the “tourist gaze”. This concept examines the contrast between the everyday surroundings seen by a local and the object of the “tourist gaze” seen by a traveller, now reduced to an object of leisure and spectacle.

Join curator Goh Sze Ying in this exploration of how the tourist gaze is constructed, reinforced and circulated over time and across different spaces, using your own postcards as a point of exploration. The 2-hour session will begin with a tour of the UOB Southeast Asia Gallery 3, followed by a discussion with Sze Ying, before we come together to share personal stories connected to our own postcards.

Note: Please bring your own postcards to participate in the sharing portion of this programme.

  • When: Sunday 2 March, 3pm
  • Suitable For: Youths, Families, Visitors with accessibility needs, Students and Educators
  • Where: Supreme Court Wing, Level 5, UOB Southeast Asia Gallery 3

About the speaker

Goh Sze Ying is Curator at National Gallery Singapore. She has worked on exhibitions including

  • Living Pictures: Photography in Southeast Asia (2022)
  • Ever Present: First Peoples Art of Australia (2022)
  • Minimalism: Space. Light. Object. (2018)


In 2019, she also co-curated the 6th edition of the Singapore Biennale, Every Step in the Right Direction.