Koh Buck Song (Chinese: 许木松; born 1963) is a Singaporean writer, poet, and country brand adviser.[1] He is the author and editor of more than 40 books, including nine books of poetry and haiga art.[2] He works as a writer, editor and consultant in branding, communications strategy and corporate social responsibility in Singapore. He has held several exhibitions [3] as a Singaporean pioneer of haiga art, developed from a 16th-century Japanese art form combining ink sketches with haiku poems.
In 2023, his book Brand Singapore: Nation Branding in a World Disrupted by Covid-19 (2021) was longlisted by the Singapore University of Social Sciences for the Alan Chan Spirit of Singapore Book Prize,[4] while his book One United People: Essays from the People Sector on Singapore's Journey of Racial Harmony (2022) was shortlisted for best non-fiction by the Singapore Book Publishers Association.[5]
Koh was with The Straits Times from 1988 to 1999, where he was literary editor, political supervisor and chief Parliament commentator, arts and features supervisor, and assistant editor of Sunday Review, a weekly world affairs section. His regular personal opinion column, Monday with Koh Buck Song, ran for almost a decade.[6]
From 2003 to 2004, he was a contributing columnist on current affairs based in the USA for the Singapore newspaper Today.[7] From 2004 to 2005, he was a regular columnist on leadership for The Straits Times.
Koh has edited several literary anthologies, and was the English section Editor, and then General Editor, of the multilingual literary and arts journal Singa in the 1990s.[8]
As a haiga artist with several exhibitions in Singapore and Laos, his art builds on earlier work exploring the synergy between poetry and painting, especially in collaborations with the abstract artist Thomas Yeo[10] and the watercolourist Ong Kim Seng.[11] He was the National Gallery Singapore's poet-in-residence 2021-22,[12] the Gallery's third after Edwin Thumboo and Madeleine Lee, with poems and haiga artworks from his residency published by the Gallery in the book the world anew.[13]
As a country brand adviser, Koh has spoken extensively on brand Singapore overseas, including as keynote speaker at a City Nation Place global conference in London, UK;[14] at the Royal Institute for Governance and Strategic Studies in Phuentsholing, Bhutan;[15] at a Pacific Economic Cooperation Council seminar in Tahiti;[16] at the Japan Foundation in Tokyo as a cultural leader of Singapore;[17] and the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University, UK.[18]
He was on the Marketing Advisory Panel for Singapore's country brand, "Passion Made Possible".[19] In the 2000s, he was head of global media relations and strategic planning at the Singapore Economic Development Board.[20] As a brand consultant, his projects include the global launches of Gardens by the Bay, National Gallery Singapore, and Fusionopolis.[21]
He wrote the first book on Singapore's country brand, Brand Singapore (2011, translated into Chinese and published in China in 2012, with a third edition in 2021).[22][23] Another of his books that has a place branding theme is Around The World In 68 Days: Observations Of Life From A Journey Across 13 Countries (2021).[24][25]
At the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, he is on the Executive Education teaching faculty for nation branding, having previously been an adjunct associate professor of leadership.[26]
His public service has included being Deputy Chairman of the Censorship Review Committee 2009–10,[27] and also a member of the Censorship Review Committees of 1991–92 and 2002–03, the only person to have served on all three panels.[28]
Koh, Buck Song (text and poetry editor, with introduction, 1993). Singapore: Places, Poems, Paintings. ISBN981-00-4559-X.
Koh, Buck Song (1994), Thumboo, Edwin Nadason (1933– ), in Hamilton, Ian, ed., The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-century Poetry in English, Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-866147-4.
Koh, Buck Song (editor, with Ban, Kah Choon et al., 1995). Voices 4 – Readings By Singapore Writers. National University of Singapore. ISBN981-00-4745-2.
Koh, Buck Song (2000). Toa Payoh: Our Kind Of Neighbourhood. Housing and Development Board, Singapore. ISBN981-232-124-1.
Koh, Buck Song (2005). How Not To Make Money: Inside Stories From Singapore's Commercial Affairs Department. ISBN981-05-4384-0.
Koh, Buck Song (2008). Heartlands: Home And Nation In The Art Of Ong Kim Seng. ISBN978-981-08-1618-6.
Koh, Buck Song (editor, 2011). Heart Work 2: EDB And Partners: New Frontiers For The Singapore Economy. ISBN978-981-4342-01-8.
Koh, Buck Song (2011). Living With The End In Mind: A Study Of How To Increase The Quality Of Death In Singapore – Perspectives Of 30 Leaders, Lien Foundation.
Koh, Buck Song (2011). Brand Singapore: How Nation Branding Built Asia's Leading Global City. ISBN978-981-4328-15-9.
Sionil Jose, Francisco (1991). New Voices In Southeast Asia. Solidarity, Manila, Philippines.
Singh, Kirpal (editor, et al. 2000). Rhythms: A Singaporean Millennial Anthology Of Poetry. National Arts Council, Singapore. ISBN9971-88-763-0.
ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information (2000). Modern Literature of ASEAN.
Edwin Thumboo & Yeow, Kai Chai (editors, 2009). Reflecting On The Merlion: An Anthology Of Poems. National Arts Council, Singapore. ISBN978-981-08-4300-7.
Poon, Angelia; Holden, Philip & Lim, Shirley Geok-lin (editors, 2009). Writing Singapore: An Historical Anthology Of Singapore Literature. National University of Singapore Press, Singapore. ISBN978-9971-69-486-9. ISBN978-9971-69-458-6.
Essay: "Tommy Koh on the Censorship Review Committee 1991-92", in Yeo, Lay Hwee et al (editors, 2018). Tommy Koh: Serving Singapore And The World. ISBN978-981-3222-38-0
Essay: "The English language in Singapore: Lens and Launchpad to the World", in Tommy Koh & Wightman, Scott (editors, 2019). 200 Years Of Singapore And The United Kingdom. ISBN978-981-4827-17-1
Essay: "America - The Top 'Soft Superpower'", in Tommy Koh & Singh, Daljit (editors, 2021). America: A Singapore Perspective. ISBN978-981-4827-34-8
^See, for example, review of "A Brief History Of Toa Payoh And Other Poems". Ikin, Van, Westerly vol 43, no.4. University of Western Australia, Australia. 1998.
^See media reports including "Blending art and poetry". Mohamad Salleh, Nur Asyiqin. The Straits Times. 21 May 2016. "10 Japanese haiga to celebrate Asean's 50th". Yusof, Helmi. The Business Times. 5 August 2017. Tani, Mayuko. Nikkei Marketing Journal, Japan. 6 June 2016.
^See, for example, the column "The trick that Singapore missed". Today. 20 Aug 2003, cited in Soft Power: The Means To Success In World Politics. Nye Jr, Joseph S. Public Affairs. USA. 2004.
^"New Singa editor". The Straits Times. 3 January 1990.
^"Eastern promise is sheer poetry". The Herald, Scotland. 8 October 1992.
^"Singapore in poetry, prose and art". Chua, Mui Hoong. The Straits Times. 24 July 1993.
^"The changing face of home". Tan, Clarissa. The Business Times. 17 October 2008.
^ Poem: "shoring Singapore" inspired by Light to Night Festival 2022, Perspectives magazine, National Gallery Singapore, 22 February 2022
^"The Singapore exception". Long, Simon. The Economist, UK. 18 July 2015.
^"Brand Singapore: How businesses can align with their country's branding in a Covid-19-plagued world". Asian Management Insights. Singapore Management University. May 2021.
^"Reset travel and life". Lee, Siew Hua, The Straits Times. 20 July 2021.
^"Panama - the Singapore of Central America?". Pérez Sánchez, Yelina. The Panama Star, Panama. 26 July 2021.
National Arts Council, Singapore – Literary Singapore: A Directory of Contemporary Writing in Singapore, 2011.
National Book Development Council of Singapore. Database of Singapore Writers: NBDCS. "Sitemap - NBDCS".
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. 2006 media coverage by faculty: "Anyone can be a leader, not just the man at the top": "Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy". Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
Singapore Management University. Knowledge@SMU: "Singapore’s brand “keloid”: Going beyond canes and chewing gums", July 2011: "Knowledge@SMU".
Institute of Policy Studies. Roundtable: "Brand Singapore", May 2011: "Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy"(PDF). Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. Archived from the original(PDF) on 1 April 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2011.