Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Minnette: The forgotten legacy

- By Shiromi Pinto

(The Guardian, UK) - The second house designed by Minnette de Silva, once one of the most famous female architects in the world, stands in Alfred House Gardens, a leafy street in Colombo, Sri Lanka, tucked away from the fumes of nearby Galle Road.

Raised on columns, the house shelters within a limestone boundary wall, its iron gate patterned with leaf shapes. A yellow oleander tree and red bougainvil­lea spill over the gate, almost entirely obscuring the house that was built for family friends the Pierises in 1952. Inside are De Silva’s trademark features: open courtyards and verandahs alive with trees, shrubs and a pond; a walled garden; a parking space that once doubled as a play area; and a staircase sweeping up to the second floor, where the bedrooms and kitchen are located.

“The bedrooms were one big room divided by teak cupboards,” recalls Prianga Pieris, son of the original owner. “Air flowed freely along the top. As children, we used to talk to each other over the walls.”

His sister, Malkanthi Perera, who lives next door, says: “She had a wonderful sense of using space usefully. Nothing was wasted.” As Perera speaks, the clamour of jackhammer­s scythes through the leafy canopy. Yet another luxury apartment tower is rearing up, this time behind her house. Colombo is changing at a rapid pace: the population is now about 6 million, and high- rise blocks are encroachin­g on the elegant vil- las of Alfred House Gardens. De Silva’s house is one of few that remain.

Meanwhile, the architect’s own studio and home in Kandy have fallen into ruin – a sobering symbol of how the legacy of this once-famous architect has been neglected.

The daughter of a reformist politician and suffragett­e, and a close friend of the architectu­ral giant Le Corbusier, Minnette de Silva was Sri Lanka’s first modernist architect and the first Asian woman to become an Associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects.

She pursued her vocation despite her father’s opposition, moving first to Mumbai and later postwar London to study. During her time at the Architectu­ral Associatio­n (AA) in the UK, she cut an elegant figure, draped in silk saris and followed by a train of young male students bearing her bags and instrument­s.

She exploited her difference – her exotic appearance and unique position at the AA – to launch herself into high society. Within no time, she became a 1940s “It girl”, rubbing shoulders not just with Le Corbusier but also Henri Cartier-Bresson, Picasso and Laurence Olivier. She never married, confiding much later in life to a friend that husbands were only good for carrying one’s bags.

After Sri Lanka became independen­t in 1948, De Silva returned and set up a studio in her family home at St George’s – one of only two women in the world at the time to establish an architectu­ral practice in her own name.

From there she began designing and building everything from cottages to villas to entire apartment blocks. Her trademark was to develop modernist architectu­re in harmony with the landscape and traditiona­l craftsmans­hip.

The Pieris’ house, her first building in Colombo, bore those unmistakab­le marks: striped, lacquered balusters in maroon and gold leaf print, echoing traditiona­l Kandyan craftwork; doors inset with woven palm panels bearing a simple tile pattern in similar colours.

Although born into a wealthy family and an undeniable member of the global elite, she was concerned with more than just building houses for her friends. Her attempt to fuse artisanal traditions with her modernist buildings ensured that often impoverish­ed craftspeop­le could earn a living from their work.

In the 1950s she worked on a housing developmen­t scheme for public servants in Kandy, the island’s second largest city. The scheme was groundbrea­king: De Silva consulted extensivel­y with future householde­rs to find out how they wanted to live – informatio­n she then used to design different housing types, some of which were built by the householde­rs themselves. It was a participat­ory approach that was decades ahead of its time.

She experiment­ed with indigenous methods such as wattle and daub, and incorporat­ed rammed earth technology – a process popularly used for today’s ecohomes – into buildings such as the Fernando townhouse, built for Mrs C. F. Fernando.

Located a little further south in Colombo, the Fernando townhouse was the product of her research into cost- effective builds. In a 1955 article, De Silva wrote: “We must re- orientate our ideas for living comfortabl­y in congested towns like Colombo, where we no longer have expansive acres of garden and spacious cool pillared halls ...”

Her attempt to fuse artisanal traditions with her modernist buildings ensured that impoverish­ed craftspeop­le could earn a living from their work.

The Fernando house is a compact cube, with cooling crosswinds channelled through a central staircase and surroundin­g verandahs, and air shafts between the door lintels and the ceiling. In a city where temperatur­es regularly surpass 30C (86F) in 90% humidity, such measures are crucial.

“She was a very nice, intelligen­t lady,” says Fernando, who still lives in the house. As we speak at her dining table the nearby staircase, constructe­d from inexpensiv­e but brilliantl­y polished satinwood, seems to spill sunlight down into the room. “She had done a lot of improvemen­ts in building and trying to cut down expenses. She was very cooperativ­e.”

For all De Silva’s vision, her contributi­on to architectu­re has been only belatedly – and sometimes begrudging­ly – acknowledg­ed. It is Geoffrey Bawa whose work is usually quoted as pioneering in Sri Lanka, even though De Silva preceded him by a decade. As the writer and architect David Robson has pointed out, it was De Silva’s experiment­s in fusing European modernism and a regional style of architectu­re that made it possible for Bawa to create the masterpiec­es for which he is celebrated.

As a woman, her ideas were often questioned by clients and even her own contractor. While building the Pieris’ house, she was forced to have her design endorsed by an engineer in London before her contractor agreed to build it. “It was male chauvinism at its best,” observes C. Anjalendra­n, an architect once closely associated with Bawa and De Silva.

These setbacks toughened her demeanour. “It was very unusual to see a woman in that kind of occupation,” says Charith, Fernando’s son. “She was very assertive – she was able to get round the workmen. She wouldn’t stand for any nonsense.”

It wasn’t enough. Her toughness soon gave her a reputation for being a “difficult woman”. Following an intense period of building in the 1950s, De Silva’s contracts dried up, while Bawa’s rocketed. Ismeth Raheem, an architect who worked closely with Bawa in the early years, recalls De Silva telling him on several occasions: “I was dismissed because I am a woman. I was never taken seriously for my work.”

“At the time, being a woman in a man’s profession in a developing country was really almost impossible,” says Anjalendra­n. “Also, as a woman, she was expecting to be paid!”

In 1996, the Sri Lanka Institute of Architects awarded De Silva the gold medal – 14 years after it recognised Bawa. By then De Silva was in financial straits, marginalis­ed and isolated. Two years later she died alone in a hospital in Kandy, after falling from the bathtub, where she lay for days before she was found. She was 80.

In the 20 years since her death, her studio and home in Kandy have fallen into ruin. Some of the original details remain, but with the woodwork decaying in the humidity, and the ceiling panels coming loose, the house is in urgent need of restoratio­n. It is not the only one. Many of De Silva’s surviving works are in a precarious state. Her first build, a low-slung villa that clings to the side of a hill in Kandy, is in danger of being demolished by its current owners. The Fernando townhouse, although largely intact, probably remains standing only because Mrs Fernando is still alive.

Will there be a revival of De Silva’s work? During his time teaching at the City School of Architectu­re in the late 1980s, Anjalendra­n ensured her work was included in the curriculum so her contributi­on would be remembered. Anjalendra­n visited her often in her later years and recalls a troubled soul: “Nobody went to talk to her – you didn’t have an escape route. She made herself lonely.” Indeed, there are few signs that she is in any way beloved in Sri Lanka.

But look closely at some of Colombo’s more progressiv­e architectu­re and you can see her influence. It’s there in the expansive Kandyan-styled roofs of Sri Lanka’s parliament complex, or the presence of indoor garden spaces inviting a piece of open sky into living rooms across the city.

The ubiquity of handwoven textiles, lacquerwar­e and brasswork as key design features in everything from boutique hotels to middle-class flats has also sprung from the same well of ideas. Back in the 1950s those ideas were radical, more so because they were applied to both rich and poor.

They are radical again now that they are under such direct threat. Sri Lanka, until recently torn apart by civil war, is in a state of near-continuous reconstruc­tion. Ambitious developmen­t projects are afoot in many of its cities. The latest, Port City Colombo, promises luxury tower blocks on reclaimed land reminiscen­t of the Palm Jumeirah in Dubai.

“She would have hated it,” says Selva Sandraprag­as, a British architect who worked with De Silva in her later years. “It displays no sensitivit­y to the history, culture or geography of where it is. It wraps itself around the old city, destroying the former context, suffocatin­g it from the sea. It could literally be anywhere: Singapore, Dubai, Hong Kong.

( Shiromi Pinto’s novel based on Minnette de Silva’s life, Plastic Emotions, will be published by Influx Press in summer 2019.)

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 ??  ?? de Silva and politician George de Silva at the 1948 World Congress of Intellectu­als in Defence of Peace. Photograph: PAP
de Silva and politician George de Silva at the 1948 World Congress of Intellectu­als in Defence of Peace. Photograph: PAP
 ??  ?? De Silva with Pablo Picasso, Jo Davidson and Mulk Raj Anand in 1948
De Silva with Pablo Picasso, Jo Davidson and Mulk Raj Anand in 1948
 ??  ?? Minnette de Silva’s house for Ian Pieris in Colombo’s Alfred House Gardens. Photograph: LASWA
Minnette de Silva’s house for Ian Pieris in Colombo’s Alfred House Gardens. Photograph: LASWA
 ??  ?? Open-plan ground floor with courtyards and pools in the Chandra Amarasingh­e House Colombo, 1960
Open-plan ground floor with courtyards and pools in the Chandra Amarasingh­e House Colombo, 1960

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