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Saskia Fernando Gallery in association with the Udayshanth and Angelika Fernando Foundation present a group exhibition featuring the 2024 A4A (Artists for Artists) Production Fund grantees—Dumiduni Illangasinghe, Malinda Jayasinghe and Mayun Kaluthantri. The A4A Production Fund was launched by Saskia Fernando Gallery in collaboration with Udayshanth and Angelika Fernando Foundation in October 2021. As Sri Lanka’s first publicly funded arts grant, the initiative aims to create a homegrown environment that encourages art practitioners to push the limits of their creative potential and continue researching and developing new bodies of work.
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Dumiduni Illangasinghe
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Dumiduni Illangasinghe’s ‘Love Untethered’ draws viewers into the delicate interplay between the phenomena of the natural realm and the human psyche. The artist begins by gathering objects that bear the imprints of life’s experiences. These objects—oil paints, paper, fabrics, coffee, mehndi—are carefully integrated into mixed-media compositions, transforming into sculptural forms and paintings that embody an aura of positivity. Illangasinghe finds a kindred spirit in the fleshy, bulbous spores of mushrooms, which translates into a vivid visual language, where ethereal imagination blends with keen observation, capturing the essence of the mushroom in abstract form.
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Dumiduni IllangasingheDreamscape Dialogue, 2024Oil on Canvas200 x 183 cm
78 3/4 x 72 in -
Dumiduni IllangasingheSpirit Murmurs, 2024Oil on Canvas200 x 183 cm
78 3/4 x 72 in -
Dumiduni IllangasingheInner Happiness, 2024Oil on Canvas90 x 90 cm
35 3/8 x 35 3/8 in -
Dumiduni IllangasingheVeil of Memory, 2024Oil on Canvas90 x 90 cm
35 3/8 x 35 3/8 in
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The abstractions in Illangasinghe’s paintings take on a physical form in her sculptural work. Sculptural forms are presented as if they were scientific specimens, encased under glass domes, preserved study and stripped of their vitality. This echoes the human impulse to shield our memories against relentless turmoil. Yet, just as mushrooms become dormant when disconnected from their mycelial networks, our memories too become distorted when isolated from the context of our experiences. The artist presents a sensitive and thoughtful study of fungi spores as the audience is encouraged to examine the intricate layers and hidden folds, providing dimension to the hidden processes of the mushroom’s life cycle.
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In ‘ Love Untethered’ delicate mediums are meticulously layered and structured, given a fleshy tactile quality that mirrors the dynamic nature of fungi and spores Illangasinghe studies. The installation responds to its environment and audience with quiet sensitivity as if an invisible transfer of matter and energy occurs as you weave through the space. Through her foray into abstraction and tactile engagement, Illangasinghe interrogates the cyclical exchanges of nature and the imperceptible links between life forms and the natural world.
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Malinda Jayasinghe
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Malinda Jayasinghe’s ‘Saffron Borders’ explores the intersection of identity, power, and border creation in the context of contested land in northern Sri Lanka. The series offers commentary on the ways in which the nationalist agenda has been weaponized for the redistribution of land, systematically displacing the minority Tamil community.
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Malinda JayasingheSaffron Borders III, 2024Oil Paint on Wood15 x 31 cm
5 7/8 x 12 1/4 in -
Malinda JayasingheSaffron Borders IV, 2024Oil paint on Wood15 x 31 cm
5 7/8 x 12 1/4 in -
Malinda JayasingheSaffron Borders I, 2024Oil Paint on Wood15 x 31 cm
5 7/8 x 12 1/4 in -
Malinda JayasingheSaffron Borders V, 2024Oil Paint on Wood15 x 31 cm (x2)
5 7/8 x 12 1/4 in
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Malinda Jayasinghe
Saffron Borders II, 2024‘Saffron Borders’ draws directly from the colour of the partitions on Sri Lanka’s national flag—a deep, earthy saffron that symbolises the country’s Buddhist heritage. This colour takes on a more ominous role in Jayasinghe's series, engulfing and encroaching upon the wooden surfaces of his work. The artist uses this visual metaphor to represent the insidious forces at play, as borders are drawn and redrawn in ways that serve the political agendas of a majority. -
Malinda Jayasinghe
Saffron Borders VIII, 2024Oil Paint on section of Wooden Hindu Chariot
244 x 39 x 8 cm
96 x 15 3/8 x 3 1/8 in -
Fusing organic materials with inorganic elements such as glass and cement, Jayasinghe evokes imagery that speaks to the complexities of existence within borderlands. ‘Saffron Borders’ addresses the tensions that arise when identity is shaped, contested, and often forcibly redefined within the shifting landscapes of power and politics.
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Mayun Kaluthantri
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In ‘Uniforms’, Mayun Kaluthanthri portrays quintessentially Sri Lankan figures in quasi-uniforms, suspended between the urge to rest and the relentless pressure to work. The characters—ranging from a gold-adorned hardware shop owner to a mechanic with a lit cigarette and a salaryman slumped in a toilet cubicle—are caught in a moment of ambiguity, leaving viewers to wonder: Are they asleep, resting, or simply worn down by the weight of fatigue?
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The artist’s process begins with preliminary sketches that allow Kaluthanthri to recall and capture fleeting encounters with individuals. The figures that emerge in these sketches are not representations of any single, defined person but rather a fusion of influences and experiences, embodying the roles they play and the ‘uniforms’ they wear. The placement and actions of these figures, caught between dimensions of reality and imagination, are almost recognizable yet remain elusive, as the familiar intertwines with the abstract.
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Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #11, 2024Gouache and Pastels on Paper84 x 60 cm
33 1/8 x 23 5/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #12, 2024Gouache and Pastels on Paper84 x 60 cm
33 1/8 x 23 5/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #13, 2024Gouache and Pastels on Paper84 x 60 cm
33 1/8 x 23 5/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #6, 2024Gouache and Pastels on Paper84 x 60 cm
33 1/8 x 23 5/8 in
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‘Uniforms’ delve into the conditions of existence within a society and culture that demands a constant outpour of labor, where near-constant exhaustion prevails. Located within this tension is uniformity, enforced through the costumes the figures don as they perform their assigned roles. A dynamic colour palette is coupled with playful distortions that warp the dimensions of the canvas. Each figure appears trapped in their own cycle of perpetual motion, caught in a loop where work and rest blur into one another.
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Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #1Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #2Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #4Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #7, 2024Gouache and Pastels on Paper84 x 60 cm
33 1/8 x 23 5/8 in
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Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #10Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #8Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #5Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in -
Mayun KaluthanthriUniform #17Gouache and Pastels on Paper25 x 18 cm
9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in
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A4A
Past viewing_room