Ong Kim Seng, born in 1945 and one of Singapore’s best known watercolourists, is largely a self-taught artist who learnt by observing pioneer watercolourists Lim Cheng Hoe (1912-1979) and Gog Sing Hooi (1933-1994) who painted by the Singapore River on Sundays. Ong, whose first solo exhibition in 1979 featured works from his 1978 trek to the Himalayas, became a full-time artist in 1985. In 1999 Ong was awarded the Cultural Medallion by the Singapore government, and in 2000 the prestigious Dolphin Fellowship by the American Watercolour Society, the only Asian to receive such an honour.This early painting by Ong shows a style different from his later one. In this, opaque colours were used, a technique Ong revealed he had observed from Singapore pioneer artist Lim Cheng Hoe’s works as they were, at that time, his only reference. Ong was also inspired by ink paintings of the 1960s to add black strokes.