On View

Nest & Neighbours: Solitude and Coexistence in High-Density Cities

Solo Exhibition

Ceet Fouad

04 April – 03 May 2026
Tue – Sun: 11am – 7pm

Poster

Exhibition Details:

Nest & Neighbours: Solitude and Coexistence in High-Density Cities

Solo Exhibition by Ceet Fouad

Curator: Rick Shi/Amanda Wei

Curatorial Team: Audrey Zhang, Yan Li, Kenneth Liu, Freya Zhang, Grace Shen

Presented by

Prestige Gallery x Wei Gallery

Supported by

Embassy of France in Singapore

Official Programme

French Excellence Singapore Festival

Exhibition Press Release | Download here

Opening Reception

Saturday, 04 April 2026

15:00 – 19:00

​Prestige Gallery (39 Keppel Rd #03-01, Tanjong Pagar Distripark, Singapore 089065)

Mr. Francois Lusteau, Cultural Counsellor of the French Consulate in Singapore, will attend the exhibition opening as the guest of honor.

RSVP​ | Please click here

 

At a time when cities across the globe continue to expand vertically, high density is no longer merely a spatial condition. It has become a force that profoundly shapes psychological structures and social relations. The exhibition “Nest and Neighbours“, presented by Ceet Fouad, unfolds within this context as a form of visual inquiry. As a key figure in contemporary French graffiti art, CEET presents his first solo exhibition in Singapore, transforming his long-term observations of Asian cities into a body of contemporary visual allegories with broader resonance.

Through his iconic “chicano chickens” figures, CEET constructs a visual system that is at once playful and complex. The seemingly repetitive forms generate a network of relations that oscillates between intimacy and detachment. These figures are at once “neighbours” and “strangers” — sharing space while maintaining subtle psychological distance. Beneath their humour and vibrant palette lies a sustained reflection on individual existence and collective structure.

Artists have been wandering between Asian cities for a long time, from the vertical compression of Hong Kong to the orderly residential aesthetics presented by Singapore’s HDB flats. These specific experiences have been translated into a highly symbolic visual language. In CEET’s work, architecture is no longer a backdrop but a structural metaphor. It organises collectivity while producing boundaries; it provides shelter while shaping the terms of connection.

This exhibition does not try to make direct criticism, but guides the audience into a more complex level of perception through a gentle but continuous visual tension. In the highly organised and superimposed urban structure, we gradually adapt to the approach of each other, but we may also lose the real connection invisibly.

When we are placed in the same structure, can we still truly reach one another?

Artist

Artist Dai Yinglun

Ceet Fouad

1971 born in Oran, Algeria

Moroccan French-Hong Kong Artist

Currently lives and works in Shenzhen, China, Hong Kong, and France

Ceet Fouad born in 1971 in Oran, Algeria. He spent his early childhood in Toulouse, France, where he began developing the imaginative visual language that would later define his practice. It was during this formative period that his now-iconic “chicken” motif first emerged—playful in appearance yet conceptually layered.

Ceet’s signature characters, often referred to as “Chicanos,” are small, vibrant, and expressive figures rendered in joyful, harmonious colours. Beneath their seemingly lighthearted surface lies a pointed reflection on contemporary society. Through these figures, Ceet explores themes of conformity, individuality, and the subtle pressures of modern life—suggesting a world in which people are increasingly shaped into “followers,” hesitant to stand apart or embrace their uniqueness.

At the same time, these characters function as personal avatars. Ceet uses them to convey his own experiences and observations, offering an ironic commentary on a social landscape where individuals often move with the tide, gradually losing distinctidentity. Since 2003, his practice has evolved into a visual language of communication—one that reflects his lived experience within densely populated urban environments, where he describes feeling “like one of the chickens in the crowd.”

 

In contemporary high-density cities, coexistence is no longer something that emerges organically. It is a condition shaped by spatial structures, institutional frameworks, and systems of organisation. This condition can be understood as organised coexistence. Within this framework, “nest”, “neighbour”, and “density” are not separate ideas. They operate as three interrelated dimensions of the same system:

The Nest: Constructed Spatial Unit

The “nest” is no longer simply a place of dwelling. It is the basic unit through which the city locates and distributes individuals by means of architecture and planning. Living spaces are standardised and modularised, placing individuals within a system that is manageable and reproducible. However, beneath this high level of order lies uncertainty. Individuals are accommodated, but not necessarily settled.

The Neighbour: Structured Social Relation

The “neighbour” once implied a naturally formed social connection. In contemporary cities, however, it has increasingly become a relationship that is planned and configured. Within highly dense residential systems, individuals live in close proximity yet often lack meaningful interaction. Beneath similar external structures lie differences and divisions. Coexistence becomes routine, while understanding grows scarce. Moments of genuine connection are often limited to close friendships. In certain social contexts, such as Singapore’s housing policies, neighbourly relations are partially shaped by institutional arrangements. In this sense, “diverse coexistence” is not only a social reality, but also a designed outcome.

Density: Intensified Coexistence

Density is not only the accumulation of space, but also the compression of relationships. Within high-density environments, the “nest” forms the physical basis of survival, while the “neighbour” defines the social condition of cohabitation. Together, they produce a state that appears stable, yet is charged with tension. Individuals depend on one another, yet remain distant. Density amplifies both the possibility of coexistence and the presence of loneliness.

Ceet, Walk alone, 2022, Oil on canvas, 100x70cm

Walk Alone

2022
Oil on canvas
100 x 70 cm

Ceet, OSLAS, 2026, Mixed Media on canvas, 60x80cm

OSLAS

2026
Mixed media on canvas
60 x 80 cm

Ceet Fouad, EXP, Mixed media on canvas,2025, 100x81cm

EXP

2025
Mixed media on canvas
100 x 81 cm

Ceet, Blue Sky, 2023, 150x180cm

Blue Sky

2023
Mixed media on canvas
150 x 180 cm

Ceet, Causeway Bay, Mixed media on canvas, 2024, 100x100cm

Causeway Bay

2024
Mixed media on canvas
100 x 100 cm

Ceet Fouad, Marie Linos, Mixed media on Canvas, 150 x 100 cm, 2022

Causeway Bay

2024
Mixed media on canvas
100 x 100 cm

Ceet Fouad, M Chikanos (white), 2022, Resin, 16 x 12 x 22 cm

M Chikanos (white)

2022
Resin
16 x 12 x 22 cm

Selected Exhibitions

2024

Free Vol”, Rose Studio Art Gallery, Paris, France


Affordable Art Fair, Step Creation Gallery, Hong Kong, China


Urban Art Fairs, Rose Studio Art Gallery, Paris, France


District 13 Art Fair, Paris, France


2023

Alben & CEET Fouad”, In Arte Veritas art galleries, Valencia, Spain


Chicanos Parade”, Idroom Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland


Art Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia


2022

LOSt Chix”, Wei Gallery, Hong Kong, China


Los Chokos / CEET & Cacaofages”, Galerie Alaindaudet, Toulouse, France


Egg Fiasco and Ceet Fouad”, Vinyl on Vinyl Gallery, Makati, Philippines


2021

CEET Fouad Peinture et ALBEN Sculpture”, Galerie Alaindaudet, Toulouse, France


2020

Du graffiti a la plume”, Rose Studio Art Gallery, Paris, France


2019

Los chicanos in Geneva”, Idroom Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland


Alain Daudet Gallery, Toulouse, France


BCK ART Gallery, Marrakech, Morocco


Fly with Chicanos”, Wei Gallery, Hong Kong, China


Make the Chicanos Great Again”, Jardin Orange Art Space, Shenzhen, China


Abstract Chicanos”, Artyze Gallery, Hong Kong, China


2018

Gallery Very Yes, Reunion Island, France


Affordable Art Fair, Hong Kong, China


ARTYZE Street & Wall”, Artyze Gallery, Hong Kong, China


Mister Freeze, Toulouse, France


OFF THE WALL, Jakarta, Indonesia


2017

The Chicanos Revolution”, Jardin Orange Gallery, Shenzhen, China


Raining Colors”, Wei Gallery, Hong Kong, China


Art Stage (Off the Wall Fair), Jakarta, Indonesia


Affordable Art Fair, Hong Kong, China


2016

Wall works, New York, USA


International Art Fair, Shenzhen, China


Mister Freeze Exhibition, Toulouse, France


Pop up Show, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France


2015

Joyce Gallery, Beijing, China


Compton Gallery, Hong Kong, China


Urban Art Biennale, Völklingen, Germany


Red Circle”, Jardin Rouge Montresso, Marrakech, Morocco


2007

Shenzhen – Hong Kong Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture


1999

Museum of Contemporary Art of Vienna, Vienna, Austria


1997

Biennale of Contemporary Art, Lyon, France