About Kennie Ting
I am a wandering cityophile and pattern-finder who is pathologically incapable of staying in one place for any long period of time. When I do, I see the place from different perspectives, obsessive-compulsively.
This gallery contains 33 photos.
South of Fort and Pettah sits the suburb of Cinnamon Gardens. Its name is a reference to what used to stand here in the Dutch period – acres and acres of cinnamon orchards. Its name is also a reference to … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 35 photos.
The name “Pettah” is derived from the Sinhalese “pita-kotuwa”, which means “outside the fort”. This exactly describes what Pettah was and is today. In the Dutch era, this area was known as the “oudestad”, or Old Town. Where the Fort … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 35 photos.
Fort, or Colombo Fort, is one of the oldest built-up areas in downtown Colombo, having been established by the Portuguese in the early 1500s as a fortified port settlement. Once there were actually walls that surrounded the city. Part of … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 32 photos.
Setting sail from Danish Tranquebar, we wend our ship southward to the jewelled isle of Ceylon (today’s Sri Lanka), situated at the southern tip of the Indian Subcontinent. We are bound for the port city of Colombo, on the southwestern … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 10 photos.
A year into the job, I’m convinced, more than ever, that a museum needs to be relevant. Not just to its local community, but also to the world. What I mean is that a museum also needs to respond to … Continue reading →
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Tagged 'Ilm, Asian Civilisations Museum, Asian Export Art, Chinese Export Ceramics, Imagination, Islamic World, Maritime Silk Route, Museums, One Belt One Route, Relevance, Science, Silk Roads, Singapore, 外销瓷, علم
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This gallery contains 17 photos.
In Tranquebar, I stayed at the excellent Bungalow on the Beach, run by The Neemrana Group. It was the closest one could get to a Grand Hotel in the town, and I wasn’t disappointed. The origins of the building aren’t … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 29 photos.
From the Danish Quarter of Tranquebar, we amble down Post Office Road to explore the Tamil Quarter. Like in Pondicherry, the Tamil Quarter is also segregated into a Hindu Quarter and a Muslim Quarter. The walk down Post Office takes … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 28 photos.
In this first of two walking tours of the historic Danish town of Tranquebar, Dream Of A City literally takes you, the reader, down King’s Street – the high street in Tranquebar – where we point out the main sights. … Continue reading →
This gallery contains 22 photos.
To the south of Pondicherry sits a somewhat laidback and half-forgotten port city, which for more than 200 years, was the capital of a modest Danish colonial empire in India. This is the city of Tranquebar, or Trankebar in Dansk. … Continue reading →
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Tagged Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg, Coromandel Coast, Fort Dansborg, Landporten, Porayar, Port and Princely Cities of the Subcontinent, Tamil Nadu, Tharangambadi, The Grand Tour, Trankebar, Tranquebar, Tranquebar Mission
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This gallery contains 2 photos.
When I first started work one of the things I was determined to do was to take my love for cities and for travel into the museum, on the understanding that CITIES and TRAVEL were two things that resonated strongly … Continue reading →