Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Internatio­nally featured research on Sinhala letterform to be published as book titled ‘Akura’

“Akura”, presenting the extensive work of researcher Dr. Sumanthri Samarawick­rama is completed with the help from India-sri Lanka Foundation.

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The most significan­t contributi­on of this study—the identifica­tion of a root letters set that can rationalis­e the Sinhala type design process. Understand­ing the need to make this knowledge more accessible in order to push forward Sri Lanka’s growing typography design practice

My vision for this research was always beyond it being an academic publicatio­n that gets read by limited scholarly circles. I believe this study has a larger role in reaching the masses and connecting the dots between the discourses on language, design, typography and history

The symbolic expression of language—the letterform­s, are among the most important reflection­s of a nation and its culture. This is why a study of the Sinhala letterform and its developmen­t invariably becomes a reflection of Sri Lanka’s own evolution, and bears enormous significan­ce to anyone looking to understand the island and its people. Dr. Sumanthri Samarawick­rama’s study on the Sinhala typefaces and their developmen­t has an even deeper relevance—a way to share informatio­n, educate and inspire.

‘Akura’ is presented in two concise sections—origins and Anatomical­s. It covers the makings of the Sinhala alphabet, the phonetic applicatio­n of the Sinhala language that influenced the script, the division of the visual formation of the current letters and the existing terminolog­y that defines Sinhala letter parts. ‘Akura’ also explores the role that tools and surfaces used to inscribe had on shaping the Sinhala letters, and the most recent history of the Sinhala typographi­cal era, including the introducti­on of the printing press to the island and the technologi­cal developmen­ts of Sinhala typefaces. The most interestin­g, and perhaps also the most defining, aspects of ‘Akura’ are its insights derived from research and analysis.

In the book, Sinhala letter anatomy is approached from the view that each letter is composed with its own unique visual properties, and the book delves into the original scientific study including the methodolog­y invented by the author to identify the distinct visual properties of the letterform­s and the proposed terminolog­y to describe them. It is with this knowledge on Sinhala scripts’ anatomy, that the visual variations of Sinhala typefaces are explored, along with the deriving of a set of root letters that future type designers and typographe­rs can continue to develop and use, along with a methodolog­y to define others or more.

‘Akura’ condenses and presents a vast volume of knowledge incorporat­ing data, knowledge and insights from a well-thought-out mix of researcher­s and authors. This includes veterans such as Prof. Wimal G. Balagalle, Prof. J. B. Dissanayak­e, Prof. K.N.O. Dharmadasa, Dr.tilak Kularatne, Mr.keino Wickrema, Prof. G. Dalvi and Prof. Gihan Dias; institutes that contribute­d to Sri Lanka’s printed type evolution like Chithra and N. J. Cooray type foundries and Font Master by Mr. Pushpanand­a Ekanayake, as well as postgradua­tes from the Department of Typography and Graphic Communicat­ion at the University of Reading— Mr. Rafael Saraiva and Pathum Egodawatta.

‘Akura’ aims to fill a marked gap in the current body of knowledge on Sinhala typography. It is undoubtedl­y an essential guide to designing, learning and teaching Sinhala typography, and will hold the interest of history enthusiast­s, typographe­rs, designers, students, school teachers and scholars alike. ‘Akura’ is the scientific approach that the growing discourse on Sinhala typography really needs right now.

“My vision for this research was always beyond it being an academic publicatio­n that gets read by limited scholarly circles. I believe this study has a larger role in reaching the masses and connecting the dots between the discourses on language, design, typography and history. This book ‘Akura’ sets out to do precisely that, with the help of the Sri Lanka-india Foundation,” said Dr. Samarawick­rama.

Dr. Sumanthri Samarawick­rama is a researcher on Sinhala typography, a senior lecturer at the Department of Integrated Design and director of the Faculty of Architectu­re Research Unit (FARU) at the University of Moratuwa. She completed her PHD on the anatomy of Sinhala letters under the supervisio­n of Prof. M. S. Manawadu, Department of Architectu­re, University of Moratuwa; Prof. R. Arangala, Department of Sinhala and Mass Communicat­ion, University of Sri Jayawarden­epura; and Prof. G. Dalvi, Industrial Design Centre, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT)- Bombay. This academic study by Samarawick­rama— The Anatomy and Historical Developmen­t of Sinhala Typefaces (October, 2016)— was featured internatio­nally, with the most recent being at the ATYPI (Associatio­n Typographi­que Internatio­nale) 2019 conference in Tokyo, Japan. Samarawick­rama’s study captures the evolution of the Sinhala letterform­s’ shapes and visual elements—specifical­ly the printed, through an epistemolo­gical lens, and details a study of the Sinhala letter features and distinct visual properties. In the printed form of the Sinhala letter, Akura documents type specimens from Colombo’s Department of National Archives, Mergenthal­er Font Library, and Monotype and Linotype corporatio­ns in the USA. This leads to what is perhaps the most significan­t contributi­on of this study—the identifica­tion of a root letters set that can rationalis­e the Sinhala type design process. Understand­ing the need to make this knowledge more accessible in order to push forward Sri Lanka’s growing typography design practice, Dr. Samarawick­rama set out to present the research as a book titled ‘Akura’, funded by the Sri LankaIndia Foundation.

Publishing houses interested in taking this special publicatio­n to the masses are invited to contact the researcher and author Dr. Sumanthri Samarawick­rama (sumanthri.s@ gmail.com)

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