Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

ENCOUNTERI­NG MINNETTE

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Reflection­s on ‘Is this an architectu­ral documentar­y?

A film by Irushi Tennekoon, Sumedha Kelegama, Sumudu Athukorala

Language: English and Sinhala

Imagine a ghost. Her sari billows behind her as she expertly hikes up a rickety ladder, hair pulled into a tight bun, a velvety rose tucked behind her ear. Intelligen­t eyes blink behind rockstar aviators. You can just tell she has a wicked sense of humour. I encountere­d Minnette De Silva earlier this year in an animated documentar­y film by three Sri Lankan artists titled ‘Is this an architectu­ral documentar­y?’ currently screening at the Museum of Modern and Contempora­ry Art Sri Lanka. I watched it from my bedroom in Karachi, Pakistan, missing the film in its intended, complete context of the 88 Acres exhibition on De Silva’s Watapuluwa Housing Scheme at the MMCA Sri Lanka which is on view until the 7th of July 2024. The film positions De Silva as an architect and researcher interested in vernacular architectu­re. She is the first Sri Lankan woman architect and the first Asian woman to be an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). Despite these accolades, this is my first encounter with Minnette.

The diverse practices deliver an interdisci­plinary look into the life and work of an extraordin­ary woman.

It is a glaringly political film, claiming to uncover the history of a ‘forgotten housing scheme’ in Kandy. This first-ofits-kind Watapuluwa Housing Scheme was designed by Minnette De Silva in post-independen­ce Sri Lanka for public servants. Through their presentati­on of the Watapuluwa Housing Scheme, the artistes make a strong case for De Silva’s approach towards participat­ory architectu­re. In this instance, the scheme came about through advocacy of the Housewives’ Associatio­n founded by wives of the public servants and was designed after conducting extensive user surveys. The documentar­y will be most enjoyed by urbanists, architects, planners, historians, and is an incredible resource for students and teachers, filled with ideas and experiment­s on collective living. Whilst rigorous in their research, evident in the number of interviews and volume of archival documents, the artistes are upfront from the start and never claim to tell One True Story, admitting that their ghost story, like all others, is made up of myths and rumours. Their diverse practices deliver an interdisci­plinary look into the life and work of an extraordin­ary woman.

Even whilst watching from my bedroom, I am enchanted from the start. By both Minnette and the invitation of the film: to imagine new worlds and to be fearless in bringing these visions to life. I can’t help but think wistfully about my brief London era as I learn about Minnette’s London period, which the film marks as significan­t to her work, politics, and thinking. When a participan­t describes a loom outside Minnette’s home in Kandy, I immediatel­y wish for a home on a hill with a clove-scented verandah where I sit at my loom all day - new desire unlocked.

The reflexive documentar­y tells a full story of Minnette De Silva: as architect, friend, colleague, mentor, aunt, woman.

The sheer number of people interviewe­d, the breadth of their expertise, and their impassione­d responses quickly reveal her influence, her vastness, and how, in a ghost-like way, she continues to touch the lives of so many. By delving deep into her personhood, the artistes point out how architectu­re is personal, subjective, political, driven by values, beliefs, aesthetic preference­s, identities, upbringing, and experience­s of the architect. At the same time, the artistes inform the audience about the larger context: the historical, political, social, cultural, and economic conditions Minnette worked in in Post-independen­ce Sri Lanka. Live-action footage, archival images and documents, stop-motion puppets, 3D renders and architectu­ral plans are elegantly placed within sketchy handdrawn frames that show-off impressive perspectiv­e drawing skills and clever wit. This marriage of diverse visual materials serves the reflexive mode. The artistes are depicted as illustrate­d characters who accompany the audience for the duration of the film. By placing the makers within their creation in this way, the audience is made aware of the constructe­dness of the film. Tennekoon’s smooth voiceover with its Lankan lilt anchors us through the saga of the trailblazi­ng Modernist architect. In many ways, the film itself stands as a testament to Minnette’s methodolog­ies.

It is participat­ory, specifical­ly including the voices of the residents of the scheme and like Minnette, the artistes experiment with materials to develop a whole new vernacular of documentar­y film to suit the story. Therefore, to answer the question posed by the artistes ‘Is this an architectu­ral documentar­y?’ I would say very much, yes!

‘Is this an architectu­ral documentar­y?’ by Irushi Tennekoon, Sumedha Kelegama and Sumudu Athukorala is currently on view at the 88 Acres Exhibition on the Watapuluwa Housing Scheme by Minnette De Silva at the Museum of Modern and Contempora­ry Art Sri Lanka, Ground Floor, Crescat Boulevard, Colombo 03. For more informatio­n visit: https://mmca-srilanka.org

Sent by Kulsum Ebrahim Kulsum Ebrahim is a visual artist working in animation and film based between Karachi and London. She is interested in cities, health, mobility, and ecology and believes in the revolution­ary potential of animation. She graduated with an MA in Animation from the Royal College of Art in 2023.

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