Our history
The Museum’s roots can be traced back to 1955, when the University Art Museum was established at the University of Malaya. Under the direction of Michael Sullivan, the Museum’s first curator (1954-1960), the collection was instrumental to the teaching and study of Art History at the University.
Established before Singapore’s independence in 1965, NUS Museum may be regarded as a prototypical museum institution; its historical trajectory mirroring significant periods in the history of Singapore and the University in its search to reflect Malayan or national identity within the context of its geography and inter-cultural encounters.
Over the decades, the Museum’s collections came to be located in various settings within the University campus and beyond. In 2000, a permanent home was established with the opening of the University Cultural Centre, with the Museum’s three permanent collections moving to this dedicated facility in 2002.
NUS Museum also manages the NUS Baba House located at 157 Neil Road. One of the last surviving Straits Chinese houses in Singapore, it was opened in September 2008 after comprehensive research and restoration work, delivered in partnership with the NUS Department of Architecture and the Urban Redevelopment Authority. Once the ancestral home of the Peranakan Wee family who descended from shipping merchant Wee Bin, the house was acquired with funds donated by the late Ms Agnes Tan in memory of her late father Tun Tan Cheng Lock who was himself a prominent Peranakan businessman and community leader. Since then, the House has continued its efforts in encouraging the appreciation of and research into Straits Chinese history, identity, iconography and architecture.
Today, NUS Museum has over 8,000 artefacts and artworks across four collections, the South & Southeast Asian Collection, the Lee Kong Chian Collection, the Ng Eng Teng Collection and the Straits Chinese Collection, located at the NUS Baba House.