Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Rock artist in search of perfect balance

- Text and pix by Amila Gamage

How many of you have visited rivers or streams with banks of dispersed stones and rocks of different shapes and sizes? Have you ever tried to balance one rock on top of another? Piling rocks on top of each other might be a difficult task for someone who tries it for the first time. The stones may keep on falling and will have to be piled up all over again. Meet someone who possesses true interest and patience in the art of rock stacking and who creates incredible installati­ons of gravity defying stone balancing works.

Stone balancing is an art, in which rocks are stacked one on top of another to create different structures. The only secret involved is discoverin­g each rock’s centre of gravity in relation to its support points which makes a ‘tripod’ of balance for the rock to stand upright.

Madusanka Dimal, 29, is a Sri Lankan artist who turns rocks into art forms. Having graduated from the University of Visual and Performing Arts in 2014, he majored in sculpture and worked on projects in relation to abstract art in his third and fourth years at the university.

“When I feel the balancing point of each rock I’m handling, I take my hands away from the stack. That is a moment of wonder which I cannot express in words,” Madusanka says.

His first attempts at rock balancing started when he was on trips with friends two years ago. Since then whenever Madusanka was out travelling he built installati­ons with rocks and stones. He has made these in almost 30 locations around the country and makes 15 to 20 installati­ons at a time.

“Whenever I face a problem, I go to a nearby stream and build stone stacks which makes me feel relaxed and relieved,” Madusanka adds. “I don’t do rock balancing with any kind of rock. I look for the rocks and stones with different shapes which could be balanced on top of another. Sometimes I have had to travel to distant locations in search of rocks and stones which are of suitable shape to be balanced.”

A sculptor and wedding decorator, he does not make a living out of this but does it for his personal satisfacti­on.

It takes some time to discover the exact balancing point of the rocks, he admits. “At that moment of discovery, I become so focused on keeping the rocks balanced that I get detached from the outside world. It is a moment of finding peace within me,” Madusanka says.

 ??  ?? Creating art works in a river situated in Deraniyaga­la, 50km away from Colombo
Creating art works in a river situated in Deraniyaga­la, 50km away from Colombo
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