Digital Expressions by Teachers


Every pixel forms a story. Come and discover with us through a series of digital expressions the photo stories skilfully told by our teacher-photographers.

Scenes of Life by Mr Derek Yeo

2020

Digital Photography

Scenes of life encapsulate the everyday, every moment pulses of life. Life has a pattern, it comes, goes and it is back again, however, it will always be unique in that moment. Life captured in stills, crystallises the colours, moods and emotions of the past. Because of that, we can enjoy these micro snapshots which make up the macro picture called Life.

HSBC Rain Vortex by Mr Leow Kor Ming

HSBC Rain Vortex

2019

Digital Photography

This photo was taken during our Staff Seminar in Nov 2019. During the seminar, we looked at the Changi Story and learned about how Changi Airport Group stayed competitive through innovation and differentiation. Little did we know, just a few months later, Covid-19 would put all air travel to a standstill.

The HSBC Rain Vortex was inspired by the tropical rains in Singapore and is a centrepiece to the entire Jewel experience. The Covid-19 pandemic is a rainstorm that Singapore must ride out together. Jewel will sparkle again.

Japanese Shinto Wedding by Mr Leow Kor Ming

Japanese Shinto Wedding, Yasaka Shrine, Kyoto, Japan

2018

Digital Photography

I chanced upon this Shinto Wedding in Kyoto back in Dec 2018. This is the first step of a Shinto wedding, known as the Sanshin-No-Gi or the Procession Ceremony. The bride and groom, with their guests and Shinto priest, are led to the shrine by a shrine maiden. The couple is preparing to stand and be presented to the gods in the shrine.

Travelog by Ms Divyashree

10 Degree Sun - Pokhara, Nepal
Frozen Dolomites - Lake Braies, Italy
Niagara - Ontario, Canada
Sunsets at 2 - South Tyrol, Italy

2013 - 2019

Digital Photography

  1. Cat: Try to imagine the silence in the image. Think about the silence capturing this without waking a sleeping animal; the click of my camera was a deafening silence.

  2. Mountain (Landscape): The negative space - the mountains, commands more attention than the positive space- the human. This creates a unique perspective; where did your eyes look first?

  3. Mountain (Square): The afternoon slipped away quickly as we walked in circles on a frozen lake. It was 3 p.m. As we watched the sunset, our biggest struggle was trying not to step on the ice cracks and crevasses and to slip into the lake.

  4. Niagara Falls: Framing the falls was one of the best ways to capture the depth and vastness of Niagara Falls. During this time of year, the falls would usually be frozen over but we got lucky. It was both scary and exciting being so close to 2400000 litres of water falling off the cliff every second.

Music Teachers’ Showcase

Ms Gracia Lim and Mdm Esther Chuah