Virtual Exhibition Archive

More To Us was a physical exhibition which took place from 18th - 21st August 2025 at Objectifs - Centre For Photography and Film to raise funds for HOME. The exhibition featured portraits by Juliana Tan which accompanied anecdotes of 11 migrant domestic workers who volunteer with HOME, a video work by Grace Baey and Denise Oliviero capturing the worker’s reflections, and winning pieces of upcycled wearable art from the 2025 Trashion show.

Scroll to view the heartfelt and inspiring content of this exhibition which now lives on in this online archive.

More To Us

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Art Exhibition

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Objectifs - Centre for Photography and Film X HOME

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More To Us

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Art Exhibition

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Objectifs - Centre for Photography and Film X HOME

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More To Us [◉°] Art Exhibition [◉°] Objectifs - Centre for Photography and Film X HOME [◉°] More To Us [◉°] Art Exhibition [◉°] Objectifs - Centre for Photography and Film X HOME [◉°]

Collaborative Portraits

Portraits of 11 migrant domestic workers photographed by Juliana Tan accompanying stories of their migration, labour, struggles, resilience and joy. These stories were originally read live by each worker to a diverse audience during She Can Sail Her Own Boat, an event held at Aliwal Arts Centre on the 3rd August 2025.

Juliana Tan

Juliana Tan’s work is rooted in the ephemeral. Attuned to the fleeting nature of life, she photographs people and stories that reflect both the banal and pivotal phases of transformation across the landscape of Southeast Asia. Her editorial clients include Time magazine, The New York Times, The Guardian, and many others.

Video Work

Created by Grace Baey and Denise Oliveiro of Tiny Big Picture, this work captures the reflections of several women migrant workers from HOME Family community groups. They share their experiences of life in Singapore, hopes for the future, and the quiet resilience that sustains them.

Grace Baey & Denise Oliviero

Grace Baey is a photographer and filmmaker, while Denise Oliveiro has a background in visual communication and filmmaking. They are the creative duo behind Tiny Big Picture, a studio that specialises in visual storytelling and the arts. Grace has also previously worked as a researcher focused on labour and migration issues, and is a long-time volunteer at HOME.

𖠋 In Real Life 𖠋

The exhibition was an opportunity for worker’s stories to manifest beyond our social media posts and website updates, taking shape in a physical space where people could immerse themselves and engage in a novel way.

We saw a great turnout of long-time and newer supporters of HOME, curious art-enthusiasts, as well as a some of the migrant workers who collaborated on the works and their peers who managed to take time off.

Over the 4-day exhibition, we saw over ___ visitors and managed to raise about 30,000 SGD in donations.

We continue to call for donations, as it takes over 250,000 SGD to run HOME’s Shelter, Helpdesks and Helplines each year.

Get In Touch With Us

If this project has inspired you, and you are interested in working with us, please send your ideas through!

We are especially interested in projects that seek to collaborate directly with our network of migrant worker communities (or even aspires to grow this network), that center their empowerment, amplifies their voices and facilitates mutual knowledge exchange.