Portraits of Resistance:
An Exhibition of Contemporary
Sri Lankan Art
Presented by
The Department of Sociology
South Asian University
New Delhi
In collaboration with
India International Centre, New Delhi
Society and Culture in South Asia
India-Sri Lanka Foundation, Delhi
Theertha International Artists Collective, Colombo
23 to 28 August 2016 from 11.00 am to 07.00 pm daily at the
Main Art Gallery, Kamaladevi Complex, IIC
The Idea
Pala Poyhupitiye, Landscape Series 1 (2012); Printed images, acrylic paint on watercolor paper |
History is an inescapable process. As human beings, our bodies are inscribed with connotations that in many ways defy temporalities of existence. But our historically marked bodies dwell in a present with a desire to invent the future. Human beings’ desire to root themselves to a place and space where identity, communality and belonging matters to a great extent, and the urge to trace historical trajectories to know the ‘true’ past has obsessed humankind.
Anura Krishantha, Untitled II, (2016); Acrylic on paper |
Within the discourse of visual art, artists have been unhesitating in interrogating history in the collective and individual memory, and often their interventions and engagements with historicity and remembrances have brought out narratives of resistance, voices of disquiet and foreboding aesthetics where the society is made not to forget. In this process, history is interpreted, recounted and mediated within their artistic personalities and particular intentions. In the hands of artists, temporality is extended, made to suspend or warped thereby letting history lose its linearity of progression. Allegory and metaphors in their aesthetic exercises add layers to the already subjective memories and selective histories framed via multiple interpretations.
Jagath Weerasinge, 'The Cause of Illness' (2011); Mixed Media on Paper |
Each of the participating artists in this exhibition has tried to capture a portrait of a nation whose historical trajectory has gone through strained moments that are heavy with colonial legacies, homeland claims, armed conflict, autocratic rule and polarized ethnic politics.
Anoli Perera, 'White Chair I: Silent Sitters' (2015); Wooden Chair, Cloth Balls, Photos and Glass Balls |
Participating Artists
Jagath Weerasinghe, Anoli Perera, Bandu Manamperi, Pala Pothupitiya, Anura Krishanta, Pradeep Chandrasiri, Pradeep Talawatte, Thisath Thoradeniya and Pushpakumara Koralegedera.
No comments:
Post a Comment