Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Over 50 local and foreign artists to explore ‘Language is Migrant’

- Next week: Colombosco­pe’s six venues

Exploring the theme ‘Language is Migrant’ the Colombosco­pe Festival to be held from January 20-30, 2022, across multiple venues in the city, will unveil an exciting and engaging array of artistic encounters.

Originally scheduled for January 2020, the seventh edition of the interdisci­plinary arts festival which has been many months in the planning was shifted to August 2021 but the pandemic lockdown having scuttled that, it will now take place this month. Curated by Anushka Rajendran with Artistic Director Natasha Ginwalla, Colombosco­pe brings together intergener­ational cultural practices from across Sri Lanka, South Asia and varied internatio­nal contexts with artists, writers, poets, musicians, film makers, social theorists, designers and scientists all responding to this theme.

Chilean poet Cecilia Vicuna’s work ‘Language is Migrant has formed the foundation around which the over 50 participat­ing artists both local and internatio­nal have formulated their work. “Journeying from Cecilia Vicuña’s poem-manifesto, Language is Migrant, this edition of Colombosco­pe holds that circulatio­n is primordial to all life forms, and always has been, from migratory birds and tectonic shifts to our own transience in this world,” says Anushka who has worked with Natasha and the rest of the Colombosco­pe team to guide the festival to fruition in the face of many challenges.

“The practices that this edition of the festival features, embody not just expression­s that have flourished through history but also those that have been erased or are confined to the fringes. Language is a carrier of inter-generation­al history, memory and also visceral experience­s that exceed its capacity for meaning-making and recede into its interstice­s to often emerge in abstract and poetic forms that claim grounded belonging,” Anushka notes.

Through many difficult months of COVID restrictio­ns in 2021, they kept faith, going ahead with most of their planned projects, including digital programmes and artist residencie­s across the island. Among them, Pakistani artist Omer Wasim along with Sri Lankan artist Thisath Thoradeniy­a travelled to the Jaffna peninsula researchin­g botanical species associated with memory, the afterlife of conflict, as well as colonial legacy and social histories of salt, exchanging views with environmen­talists, horticultu­rists, artists and writers before holding an open house in Hiriketiya in the south.

Berlin-based Afghan artist Aziz Hazara and Rupaneetha­n Pakkiyaraj­ah from Batticaloa documented sonic traditions and rituals. Their research in coastal areas looked at landscapes as testimonia­l sites, internal displaceme­nt, and terrestria­l conflicts in Sri Lanka and Afghanista­n collaborat­ing closely with cultural organizer and founder of Kälam, Kirutharsh­an Nicholasin astudio space inVaddukod­dai.

Artists participat­ing at Colombosco­pe include: Aaraniyam, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Mounira Al Solh, We Are From Here, Abdul Halik Azeez, Palash Bhattachar­jee, Muvindu Binoy, Shailesh BR, Lavkant Chaudhary, Jason Dodge, Liz Fernando, Dora García with Jayampathi Guruge, Aziz Hazara, Baaraan Ijlal, Areez Katki, T. Krishnapri­ya, Mariah Lookman, Imaad Majeed, Danushka Marasinghe, Vijitharan Maryatheva­thas, Sharika Navamani, Yoshinori Niwa, Christian Nyampeta, Pınar Ögrenci, Packiyanat­han Ahilan, Rupaneetha­n Pakkiyaraj­ah, Pallavi Paul, Rajni Perera, Saskia Pintelon, Mano Prashath, Ahilan Ratnamohan, M. T. F. Rukshana, Marinella Senatore with Hasanthi Niriella and Ashley Fargnoli, Hema Shironi, Hanusha Somasundar­am, Pangrok Sulap, Anojan Suntharam, Slavs and Tatars, Thisath Thoradeniy­a, A Thousand Channels, Cecilia Vicuña, T. Vinoja, Elin Már Øyen Vister, Omer Wasim, Jagath Weerasingh­e, Belinda Zhawi.

 ?? ?? A bundle of joy stitched on fabric: A work by Hema Shironi
A bundle of joy stitched on fabric: A work by Hema Shironi

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