What are your nightmares made of? For Singaporean photographer Tay Yuan Song, it鈥檚 1920s dolls, animal skulls, and Barbie鈥檚 limbs.听
The 23-year-old artist has a penchant for bewitching his audience and then leaving their blood run cold with scenes of pagan rituals, a creepy Humpty Dumpty, and beheaded dolls simmering in curry. These are just some of the tricks he keeps in his bag of horrors, and more.听
鈥淔ear, phobia, trauma are all deeply ingrained inside our brain. Fear cannot and will never lie,鈥 Tay said when asked about his obsession with the dark side. Speaking to 黑料社 while serving his time as the country鈥檚 national serviceman, Tay explained that his art uses horror to reveal our most authentic side, while also helping him to express his inner demons.
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鈥淢y horror art is like a platform for me to channel my suppressed and bottled up feelings. It helps me to look deeper into my darkness in my subconscious mind to drag those monsters straight out of my nightmares and proudly exhibit them for my audiences to see,鈥 he said.
Besides, with the overly glorified images of Singapore鈥檚 Marina Bay Sands resort and the Jewel Changi Airport, Tay鈥檚 take on a more ghoulish version of this glitzy city-state might even seem refreshing. He transforms Coney Island, parks, playgrounds, and cemeteries of Bukit Brown into backdrops worthy of a scene in the wildly popular American Horror Stories TV series.
Creating horrifying photos also makes Tay feel 鈥渁live and occupied in this mundane world,鈥 and for as long as he can remember, he has always been drawn to things that are 鈥渟trangely beautiful.鈥 Perhaps, his outlook on art is similar to Banksy, the famous and mysterious English street artist, who once said: 鈥淎rt should comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable.鈥
He has added morbid twists to the nursery rhyme icon Humpty Dumpty, which according to his imagination is a woman with an oversized bald head and carrying a haggard doll. He also rekindled memories of the horrifying 1984 curry murder with a video of the dish being .听
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Tay鈥檚 most disturbing work yet is one that mixes death and kink. Tay recently traveled to the Tampines Quarry with some members of the local BDSM community for a photoshoot that incorporated the shibari Japanese bondage as well as goat skulls, and bones from a local taxidermist. Some might see it as something out of satan鈥檚 bedroom. But for Tay, that鈥檚 a dream come true.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 my favorite because I’ve been wanting to shoot a pagan ritualistic kind of shoot for a long time and I finally shot it,鈥 he said.
One time, an old woman was so horrified by the masked-up models waving at her on set that she had to cover her grandchild鈥檚 face while walking past. Tay said he was prepared to have the police called on him for acting suspiciously.
But scaring Singaporeans is not his only plan. Tay also hopes to inspire a change in taste in art.
鈥淚 want to live to see the day more people accept this form of art that I create today. And I really really really hoped to inspire more people to step out of their comfort zone to do what they really like instead of what society expects,鈥 he said.

House of horrors
Tay has boxes filled with dolls and masks in a room.听
One of them had Barbie dolls sticking out of the face. There is also a doll – all scratched up and with piercing blue eyes – that was created a century ago during the 1920s. He considered these two as some of his 鈥渂est companions.鈥
Tay has more than 30 masks and a handful of dolls. Most of them shipped from the United States and Europe. He doesn鈥檛 keep count of exactly how many he has but knows that he has spent more than S$1,600 (US$1,200).听
Something hidden
鈥淭he main reason I use a mask is because I also believe that masks frighten people not because of how it looks on the outside but what’s hidden behind the mask. Humans are also scary,鈥 he said. Tay shows off his creepy haul of dolls and masks on TikTok, where he will tease his viewers with horror stories about them. Are those real? It鈥檚 up to you to decide, he said.
鈥淚 will just tell them I will neither deny or confirm that it鈥檚 real. It鈥檚 up to them to believe, if they don鈥檛 believe I鈥檓 ok with it because if I tell people it鈥檚 fake they also don’t believe. I tell people it’s real they also won’t believe so I just let them decide,鈥 he said.听
For someone who enjoys the ghostly world so much, Tay doesn鈥檛 actually believe in ghosts. Not even devil-worshipping. But his mother thinks he鈥檚 鈥渃razy.鈥 She nearly called in a counselor after seeing her son bringing home creepy-looking dolls and masks all the time, Tay said.听
Years later, his mother became used to his antics. She once shocked Tay by laying out the doll limbs used for the cooking video on the window sill to dry.
鈥淎fter that shoot I rinsed the doll parts and the next day I woke up and I was quite shocked to see that my mum had helped me casually hang the things outside. She arranged it neatly with the arms and legs. I think it’s quite funny, I can imagine the neighbors keep looking at her,鈥 he said.听
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