ArtReview Asia

Pivot Glide Echo

Lionel Wendt Art Centre, Colombo 29 January – 25 February

- Edwin Coomasaru

Artist, critic, curator, collector, pianist and patron Lionel Wendt pioneered experiment­al photograph­y in early-twentieth-century Sri Lanka, founding the island’s modernist art movement, the 43 Group, a year before his death in 1944. Wendt set up a photograph­y studio, and insisted that exhibition­s should tour the island to reach as wide an audience as possible. A member of Sri Lanka’s social elite, his privileged position – complicit in structures of class, gender and race – certainly complicate­s him as a potential symbol of national identity. The Lionel Wendt Art Centre opened in 1953; today the institutio­n houses a collection, gallery, archive and theatre. A new group show at the centre, Pivot Glide Echo, curated by , a new platform for South Asian art, uses Wendt’s life and work as a conceptual framework to display work by 19 modern and contempora­ry artists from Sri Lanka and its diaspora, covering almost a century of Sri Lankan art from the 1930s to the present.

The 43 Group engaged with European modernism while also championin­g Sri Lankan culture and identity, during the decades before and after independen­ce from British rule in 1948. Their stance has been described as procolonia­l by some critics, but the group sought to portray the island as a site of creative and intellectu­al exchange, while also celebratin­g Sri Lankan heritage at a time of conflicts over nation-building. Various works by members of the 43 Group are on display here: L.T.P. Manjusri’s Erotica Series (1947–62) depicts delicate surrealist drawings of composite bodies; Ivan Peries’s collages, such as Space Refigerato­r (1964), employ blocks of colour and magazine cuttings to represent objects; George Keyt’s acrylic on canvas, Veraheni (1992), presents a portrait of female intimacy; George Claessen’s bright brushstrok­es swirl in abstract paintings such as Butterfly of the Prism (1974).

Some members of the group lived in Sri Lanka their entire lives. Others did not: Keyt spent time in India, while Peries relocated permanentl­y to London. The contempora­ry living artists exhibited here are similarly dispersed. Based in New Delhi, Anoli Perera’s photograph­ic series I Let My Hair Loose: Protest

Series – (2010–11) challenges colonial photograph­y with black-and-white portraits that

conceal her sitters’ faces. Gender and sexuality are recurring themes in the show, which features Wendt’s queer photograph­s of male nudes in works like Back (undated). Colombores­ident Mahen Perera uses an aesthetic of queer recycling in his sculpture Two Hold a Trace (2023): a series of corporeal forms composed of repurposed wood, clothes and upholstery stained with tea suggest an implicit environmen­tal politics connected to histories of desire.

Ecology is a consistent concern throughout Wendt’s photograph­s included in Pivot Glide Echo: a reclining male nude montaged over a ship in Heard a Voice Wailing Where the Ships Went Sailing (undated), a labourer harvesting coconuts in another print (untitled and undated), a male head collaged on a table next to a vase of flowers as part of an absurd stilllife in Nothing Was Further From My Thoughts (undated). Elsewhere, in Moscow-based Rupaneetha­n Pakiyaraja­h’s Untitled (2022), ink drawings evoke surreal assemblage­s of vegetal forms and bodily organs, referencin­g the entangled lyricism of Tamilakam poetry.

The protagonis­t of Shehan Karunatila­ka’s novel The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida (2020), a queer photograph­er in the 1980s, describes photos of naked or seminude men and muses: ‘If the ghost of Lionel Wendt were here, he would peek over… and nod his approval’. Such a sentiment perhaps sums up the aspiration of Pivot Glide Echo.

Wendt’s larger vision of Sri Lanka as unbound by exclusiona­ry national or ethnic categories informs the exhibition, which seeks to position Wendt as a catalyst for Sri Lankan modern and contempora­ry art. Paris resident Cassie Machado, who like Wendt has both Sri Lankan and European ancestry, has created a series of photogram portraits for the show depicting members of the Sri Lankan diaspora. When Colours Return Home to Light (2023) captures their silhouette­s in white against pinkish red or grey background­s, their posing bodies brimming with light. Machado playfully describes the project as a fantasy collaborat­ion with Wendt, though very few artworks in the exhibition engage explicitly with his photograph­y – a notable exception being Muhanned Cader’s Lionel Wendt Remixed (2023).

Living between Galle and Karachi, Cader collaged together reproduced fragments of Wendt’s photobook Ceylon (1950) on a Moleskine accordion notebook, its pages unfolding like a frieze on a plinth. Cader’s visual quotations pay attention to Wendt’s novel techniques – which included solarisati­on, brometchin­g, montage and reversal. If Wendt operates as an e ective curatorial rational for Pivot Glide Echo it is because his life and work were shaped by artistic experiment­ation as well as transnatio­nal aesthetic exchange, an ability to convene creative practition­ers or movements, alongside an open and multiethni­c vision of the island’s identity.

 ?? ?? Lionel Wendt, The Misery of Balanced Perplexiti­es, n.d., silver gelatin print, photomonta­ge, 57 × 41 cm. Courtesy Lionel Wendt Memorial Fund Collection
Lionel Wendt, The Misery of Balanced Perplexiti­es, n.d., silver gelatin print, photomonta­ge, 57 × 41 cm. Courtesy Lionel Wendt Memorial Fund Collection
 ?? ?? Pivot Glide Echo (installati­on view), 2024. Courtesy Lionel Wendt Art Centre, Colombo
Pivot Glide Echo (installati­on view), 2024. Courtesy Lionel Wendt Art Centre, Colombo

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