Lifestyle Magazine

Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

By Huney_84
Hi Huneybees,
Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Every June, something quietly changes around Marina Bay.

The office crowds begin slowing down after sunset. Strangers stop to interact with glowing installations. Families wander along the waterfront a little later than usual. Couples linger by the bay taking photos while children run excitedly between beams of light.

For a few weeks, Singapore somehow feels softer after dark.

This year, i Light Singapore 2026 returns from 5 to 28 June 2026 with a theme that feels especially fitting for the city right now: Movement. Unlike previous editions where many installations focused mainly on spectacle, this year’s festival feels far more interactive, emotional, and human.

Instead of simply admiring artworks from afar, visitors are invited to touch, move, create, wander through, and even become part of the installations themselves. Rather than just transforming Marina Bay into just a giant outdoor gallery, i Light Singapore 2026 feels like it is turning the city into a shared playground after dark.


Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

WAVE by Masamichi Shimada
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

You Don’t Just Observe The Art — You Activate It

One of the strongest things about this year’s line-up is how many of the installations respond directly to human interaction.

At The Promontory, WAVE by Japanese artist Masamichi Shimada invites visitors to tap silver sticks against the ground, sending ripples of light and sound outward across the installation. The concept sounds simple, but there’s something oddly poetic about it.

A tiny movement creates a visible reaction. A small action changes the atmosphere around you. The installation itself becomes a reminder that even small gestures can leave an impact beyond what we immediately see.

Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Where the Wildflowers Grow by Kester Wong and Tan Shao Qi
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

Nearby at Mist Walk, Singapore artist-designer collective Kester Wong and Tan Shao Qi present Where the Wildflowers Grow, a glowing garden installation crafted from reclaimed industrial materials, metal offcuts, and discarded carpet. The oversized flowers gently sway in response to touch, almost as if the entire installation is quietly breathing with the crowd moving through it.

I already have a feeling this might become one of those unexpectedly calming corners people end up lingering at longer than planned.



Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Let's Fish the Sun! by Wentao Wang
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

Some Installations This Year Feel Purely Whimsical

And then there are the artworks that simply sound fun in the best possible way.

At the Marina Bay Lower Boardwalk, Let’s Fish the Sun! by Chinese artist Wentao Wang lets visitors literally “fish” the sun back into the sky using a giant fishing rod installation. As the glowing orb rises, its colours gradually shift from crimson to amber and eventually into warm white light.

The concept itself already feels wonderfully surreal and I can already imagine adults and children queueing up equally excited just for the chance to rewind sunset for a few seconds.

Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Cube Graphics by Cyril Lancelin
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

Over at Marina Bay Sands Event Plaza, French artist Cyril Lancelin’s Cube Graphics transforms geometric inflatable forms into a giant immersive structure visitors can physically walk through.

From the outside, the installation appears to vibrate with movement through optical illusion patterns. Step inside, however, and the experience completely changes into colourful gradients, shifting perspectives, and distorted corridors. It seems like the kind of installation that will become extremely photogenic this year while still remaining genuinely immersive beyond just being “Instagram-worthy.”

Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Arch Flower by Cyril Lancelin
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)


Meanwhile over at Raffles Place Park, French artist Cyril Lancelin also brings Arch Flower to life — a glowing sculptural passageway inspired by floral forms and movement.

Unlike traditional rigid architectural structures, the installation twists upward in soft tubular curves, creating arches that feel almost organic as visitors wander through them. Shades of pink and green gradually shift across the structure, transforming the space into something that feels both futuristic and strangely dreamlike at the same time.

I can already imagine this becoming one of the festival’s biggest photo spots, especially at night when the glowing gradients fully illuminate the arches and visitors move through it, pause inside it, and experience the changing perspectives around them. 


Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Infinite Graffiti by Graffiti+
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

There’s Also A Strong Sense Of Collective Play

One installation I think many families and friend groups are going to gravitate toward is Infinite Graffiti by Graffiti+ from Canada. Located at the entrance of Marina Bay Link Mall, the installation transforms graffiti into a giant collaborative digital artwork using sensor-activated spray cans and glowing projections.

Instead of creating art individually, visitors build the artwork together over time. Totally in love with that idea because it feels very aligned with the overall spirit of this year’s festival — movement not just as physical motion, but as shared participation. Even strangers temporarily become collaborators.

Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Silent Moments by BN label 
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

Meanwhile, Silent Moments by Slovak collective BN label might end up becoming one of the festival’s most quietly memorable installations.

Large illuminated silhouettes depicting everyday gestures — cycling, strolling, resting, napping — will populate the waterfront, encouraging visitors to slow down and interact with them. In a city that constantly feels like it’s moving at full speed, there’s something oddly comforting about an artwork dedicated to simply… pausing.



Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Market Cycles by Ng Choon Wee and Tan Mei Yee
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

Some Of Works Feel Deeply Singaporean

Beyond the larger spectacle pieces, several installations this year also explore overlooked parts of daily Singapore life in thoughtful ways.

One of the most fascinating examples is Market Cycles by Singapore designers Tan Mei Yee and Ng Choon Wee under the new i Light Future mentorship programme presented by DesignSingapore Council.

Using ordinary wet market plastic crates, the artists transform functional everyday objects into a glowing architectural installation, taking something most Singaporeans see almost daily — and probably never think twice about — and suddenly reframes it as something beautiful.

Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

Steps by Nawal Bte Azhar 
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

Another local work, Steps by Nawal Bte Azhar, reimagines staircases as glowing impossible structures that shift depending on perspective. The installation symbolises Singapore’s evolving journey and how progress can look entirely different depending on where you stand.



Why i Light Singapore 2026 Feels More Human This Year

GastroBeats
(Image Credit: i Light Singapore 2026)

GastroBeats Returns Too

Of course, no Marina Bay festival feels complete without food and late-night wandering.

Returning once again as the festival village of i Light Singapore, GastroBeats will take over Bayfront Event Space with up to 40 food vendors, live music performances, arcade games, pickleball activities, and a new Elevated Dining Zone overlooking the skyline.

Especially during the June school holidays, the entire festival already feels less like a traditional arts event and more like a full evening experience where people can freely drift between installations, food, performances, conversations, and waterfront walks.


This year's i Light Singapore 2026  is standing out to me with that many installations seeming less focused on passive viewing and more interested in human participation. The festival only truly comes alive when people interact with it.

You touch the flowers.
You create the ripples.
You fish the sun.
You walk through the geometry.
You become part of the glowing silhouettes.

And perhaps that’s why this year’s edition already feels a little more emotional than previous years. In a city that often moves too quickly, that feels like something worth slowing down for.


i Light Singapore 2026

📍 Marina Bay & Raffles Place
📅 5 to 28 June 2026
🕢 7.30pm to 10.30pm daily
🎟 Admission is free (charges may apply for selected programmes)

More information can be found at i Light Singapore Official Website.


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