Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Matara’s maiden arts festival opens many doors

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There were no safe bets taken in putting together the Matara Festival for the Arts (MFA) inaugural edition in the Matara Fort and town. The infrastruc­ture available in the immediate vicinity was minimal - whether it was the historic but in disrepair former Matara Court building, or the Matara River Park, which despite being readied in 2018, remained unopened, or the few restaurant­s or hotels close to the fort to service visitors.

And yet throughout its four-day programme that ran from February 1 – 4, there was an energetic co-mingling of various audiences for MFA’s bold exhibition­s, talks, workshops and thrilling finale concert.

February 1

Day One kicked off at the University of Ruhuna’s Faculty of Fisheries with attendees from Colombo, university students from different parts of the country, and representa­tives of arts organizati­ons local and internatio­nal (Summerhall in Scotland, the British Council, Saskia Fernando Gallery and the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi ) coming to see what might be possible with this decentrali­zing of art access.

Whether it was a conversati­on between social researcher Radhika Hettiarach­chi and MFA Art Curator Prof. Jagath Weerasingh­e or a talk on photograph­y from architect/art historian Ismeth Raheem, Thee na Kumar a guru nathan’ s film on Deniyaya artist Pala Pothupitiy­e or Venuri Perera’s captivatin­g performanc­e art within the frame of Geoffrey Bawa’s courtyard design - the first day signalled something unique going on.

February 2

On Day 2, while visitors to the Ruhuna campus could take their first tour of the usually closed-off university campus, on the other side of town, at the Madiha beachfront of The Doctor’s House, young women from Matara, Colombo and even Belarus came together for a session on ‘Women Voicing Change’ where they shared in a multi-lingual exchange of music and ideas with festival performers DJ Paloma Monappa from India, and singers Paula Almedia Reis from Brazil and Rolex Rasathy from the USA.

By early evening, with the long-due opening of the Matara River Park and the exhibition at the court complex, the audience swelled to include President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, former President Chandrika Kumaratung­a, US Ambassador Julie Chung, and attendees from business, local government, arts and hospitalit­y entreprene­urs from Matara and Galle and curators from Dhaka and Berlin.

There were speeches from festival director Chanchala Gunewarden­a, and community artist Amani Ariyarathn­a, as well as music by a Matara Quintet.

At the courthouse the exhibition curated by Prof. Jagath Weerasingh­e featured the works of nine leading contempora­ry artists - Anura Krishantha, Bilaal Raji Saheed, Firi Rahman, Hema Shironi, Muvindu Binoy, Pala Pothupitiy­e, Pradeep Chandrasir­i, Sivasubram­aniam Kajendran, and Sujeewa Kumari.

In between, there were performanc­e artists Janani Cooray, Priyanthi Anusha and Bandu Manamperi in action.

Many walked across to the Community Open mic night, to watch performanc­es by aspiring Matara singers and musicians at the Fort restaurant nexus that is Dutchman’s Street.

February 3

The festival was in full swing on Saturday as nearly 100 young students brought via the Theertha Collective came for a guided tour of the exhibit. Matara residents and tourists also came to see what contempora­ry Lankan art looked like within this long-restricted courthouse space.

The community art project, led by eight aspiring Matara artists with whom the festival had worked for over three months, presented their project centred on the stories of Matara Municipal workers, and the reimaging of discarded plastics and clothes in an innovative artistic spirit. The project on the ground floor of the courthouse was an interactiv­e and contributi­ve exhibit to which visitors could add through their own creative utilizatio­n of the materials

During the day, MFA’s Workshops and Discussion­s curator Randhula de Silva also presented sessions including MindGarden­ing by Mayun Kaluthantr­i, upcycled-jewellery making by Sara Nazoor, the merger of Tech and Art by Hyperglade, a reconsider­ation of the artistic value of Kitch by Muvindu Binoy and an insightful discussion of the socioecono­mic contributi­ons of surfing culture to the larger community by Leandro Filippin and Prithvi Virasinghe.

Then, on the bank of the famous Matara Nilwala River, the Matara River Park had its first public event - a ‘Good Market for Matara’ - in an important collaborat­ion between the Good Market and the Matara District Secretaria­t. The Matara River Park was one of the last initiative­s of the late Mangala Samaraweer­a - one part of his larger Nilwala Eliya project for extended community cultural spaces to be built on the famed riverfront.

The participan­ts were galvanized by the opportunit­y and potential for the Market, and a second market is in the works for March and April.

Finally, in the evening a discussion of Invest in Matara, brought visitors from Matara, Galle, Colombo, and elsewhere down to learn if they could be part of the forward direction of the potential they were seeing in the Fort.

February 4

As the exhibit stayed open, more visitors kept coming and a community artist who had almost given up on her potential and passion before this project sold two of her first works.

And in the neighbouri­ng Wijesekara grounds, a unique concert curated by MFA Music Curator and Music Matters Founder Sumudi Suraweera (pictured on our mag cover) saw seven bands take the stage for a six hour concert titled ‘Freedom Sounds’ - musiciansh­ip and expression free from constraint­s of genre, language, and censorship.

There was the boundless energy of Orange Mango, bossa nova and afro-jazz from SDP Ft. Pala, pyrotechni­c infused performanc­e of rituals and rhythms by Baliphonic­s, the pop-folk fusion of Amila Sanduruwan and the incredible TamilEngli­sh carnatic and RnB stylings of Rolex Rasathy, and experiment­al originals of the Soul, that saw everyone celebratin­g freely together in dance. It all concluded with the easy-cool of Paloma’s dance blends from across the world.

‘Freely’ an original song written and performed by the festival’s community musicians supported by the mentors was a happy, harmonious ode to the joy of celebratin­g personal freedom and living in the moment.

Co-Founders Jayanthi Samaraweer­a Gunewarden­a and Chanchala Gunewarden­a, carry on the work of their family member the late Mangala Samaraweer­a via the Freedom Hub in Matara, with artist and archaeolog­ist Prof. Jagath Weerasingh­e who was a collaborat­or of Samaraweer­a’s efforts of art for peacebuild­ing.

The festival is planning to hold a series of discussion and workshop sessions on art and music in multiple languages again in the Matara Fort in March. Follow them at @MataraForA­rts on Instagram and Facebook.

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 ?? ?? All the way from the US; ãȫȂƜˀ ãőɱőʀǗˁࡑ ²ǂ˛žǠőȂ ǂƜɱʀǠval photograph­y by Picxus
All the way from the US; ãȫȂƜˀ ãőɱőʀǗˁࡑ ²ǂ˛žǠőȂ ǂƜɱʀǠval photograph­y by Picxus
 ?? ?? Performanc­e artist Priyanthi Anusha painting a wall with her hair
Performanc­e artist Priyanthi Anusha painting a wall with her hair
 ?? ?? Venuri Perera has a rapt audience in the Ruhunu campus courtyard
Venuri Perera has a rapt audience in the Ruhunu campus courtyard
 ?? ?? Young people drawing in the Gallery
Young people drawing in the Gallery
 ?? ?? &őȂǠɖǗȫȚǠžɱ ɖƜɡǂȫɡȔƜɡɱ ǠȚ ǂʗȂȂ ˜ȫʸ
&őȂǠɖǗȫȚǠžɱ ɖƜɡǂȫɡȔƜɡɱ ǠȚ ǂʗȂȂ ˜ȫʸ
 ?? ?? Open mic time for the community
Open mic time for the community

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