Singapore Night Festival 2026: Myths and Legends Come to Life Across Bras Basah.Bugis

Singapore Night Festival is back for its 17th edition, running from 21 August to 5 September 2026 across the Bras Basah.Bugis precinct. This year’s theme is Myths and Legends — a nocturnal journey through the folklore, sea stories, and founding tales of Singapore and the wider region. Best of all, most programmes are free.

Tales of Earth and Sea projection mapping at Singapore Night Festival 2026
Tales of Earth and Sea — projection mapping on the National Museum of Singapore facade. Image: The Fox, The Folks / Singapore Night Festival

A New Zone, Four Precincts

For 2026, the festival expands with a brand-new Museum Zone centred around the National Museum of Singapore, the Children’s Museum Singapore, and neighbouring heritage buildings. It joins three returning zones: Funan and CHIJMES, Cathay Green and Waterloo Centre, and Bras Basah Complex and Stamford Arts Centre. The footprint encourages visitors to explore beyond the obvious headliners and into the quieter corners of the district.

Tales of Earth and Sea

The centrepiece is Tales of Earth and Sea, an immersive projection mapping showcase that will transform the façade of the National Museum of Singapore each evening from 7.30pm to midnight. Created by Indonesian multimedia collective The Fox, The Folks, the work reimagines local and regional folklore through striking visuals paired with an original cross-border soundtrack.

Roaming alongside the projections will be Birdmen, the Southeast Asian debut of Dutch theatre company Close-Act Theatre. Expect towering stilt-walking performers dressed as giant, luminous birds moving through the crowds — part street theatre, part myth made flesh.

Stormy Straits light sculpture at Singapore Night Festival 2026, Bugis Street Art Lane
Stormy Straits, inspired by Bugis maritime legends. Image: Melting Po(r)t Collective / Singapore Night Festival

Stormy Straits

At Bugis Street Art Lane, Stormy Straits tells the story of the Bugis seafarers who braved treacherous monsoon winds and seas to reach Singapore’s shores in the 1800s. Glowing cloud-like sculptures cast moving shadow projections across the lane, with illuminated platforms where visitors can “seek refuge” — much as those early sailors looked to lighthouses to escape the elements.

The Lost Legacy of Fort Canning: The Forbidden Hill

For those drawn to darker myths, The Lost Legacy of Fort Canning: The Forbidden Hill is a 70-minute guided night trail through Fort Canning Park. It plunges into the ancient legends surrounding Bukit Larangan — the hill that was once forbidden to all but royalty — with atmospheric soundscapes and live traditional Malay dance bringing the world of 14th-century Singapore back to life.

Inaugural MALAM Projection Mapping Competition

The Cathay is the venue for the first-ever MALAM Projection Mapping Competition, shining a spotlight on Southeast Asia’s emerging digital artists. The top 20 entries will light up the building during the festival’s opening week, with the five winning works remaining on display for the full run of the event.

The Blooming Hearts Fortune Merlion recycled sculpture at Singapore Night Festival 2026 Plaza Singapura
The Blooming Hearts Fortune Merlion, made from recycled PET bottle flakes. Image: Singapore Night Festival

More to Discover Across the Precinct

The precinct is peppered with additional installations: a towering Sang Kancil, glowing bamboo sculptures inspired by Dragon’s Tooth Gate, a recycled-plastic Blooming Hearts Fortune Merlion at Plaza Singapura, and maritime-themed alleyways. At Oldham Theatre (within the National Archives of Singapore), a curated Horror Nights film series screens vintage Southeast Asian horror cinema on selected evenings, with tickets at $10 per session.

Further artwork reveals and ticketed programme details will be announced from 3 August. The festival’s interactive map and personalised trails will go live during the event itself.

The Details

  • Dates: 21 August – 5 September 2026
  • Times: Sunday–Thursday, 7.30pm–11pm; Friday–Saturday, 7.30pm–midnight
  • Admission: Mostly free; ticketed programmes clearly marked
  • Where: Bras Basah.Bugis precinct (multiple venues)
  • More info: heritage.sg/sgnightfest
Clara Tan
Clara Tan
Clara Tan is Little Big Red Dot's Editor-at-Large. She oversees the quality and direction of content across all categories, bringing depth, context, and a sharp editorial eye to everything she covers. Clara writes thoughtful, well-researched features that connect the dots across lifestyle, culture, business, and current affairs in Singapore.

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