What is Not Visible in Not Invisible: Homeless Jesus and the surplus pots.  (Part 2 of day 2)

by Kerry Tolson @kerrytolson.com.
Picture Picture Fifty minutes later we arrive back to Singapore central to a bucketing down deluge of big fat hard-smacking raindrops and grey skies.  A blanket of mugginess wraps itself around us as we step from Raffles plaza onto the footpath.

Our next destination was to walk over to Marina Bay Sands and zip up to the sky park with its largest infinity swimming pool in the world, on the way stopping for a nibble to eat at one of the many cafes at the esplanade.  
Instead we duck back into the shopping mall, down the escalator and find ourselves ‘picnicking’, Asian style – mouth-watering Vietnamese fare and cheap beer in enamel cups while sitting on cute plastic stools with a 'field of grass' table.
Picture It's still raining after lunch, so we head for the National Museum of Singapore located in a beautiful 1887 Renaissance-style building filled with endless rows of arches and a massive ‘white-house’-esqe dome.  The museum is the oldest in Singapore, although it’s original name was the “Raffles Library and Museum”.  

Its building is a big favourite for photographers of all scopes. There are ‘shoots’ everywhere – wedding pics, fashion shoots, photography-workshops – all taking place while we wander through the stunning architecture - and  inadvertently photo bomb the equally stunning images with 'the-drown-rat'-in-the-background'  pose.
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Published on January 27, 2017 05:00
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