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WSWS : Arts
Review : Exhibitions
A superb exhibit on militarism
Camouflage: An exhibition of paintings and etchings
by Chandraguptha Thenuwara
By Darshana Medis
19 November 1999
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A series of paintings and etchings by a noted Sri Lankan artist,
Chandraguptha Thenuwara, was exhibited recently at the Vibhavi
Academy of Fine Arts (VAFA Gallery), in Ethulkotte, a suburb of
Colombo, Sri Lanka's capital city. Entitled Camouflage,
the exhibit consisted of 27 works, including a number of remarkable
pieces.
It is quite evident that visual art has gone through a period
of sharp decline in Sri Lanka since George Keyt*. Although a great
many young artists have entered the field, it is very seldom that
one comes across paintings that could be considered great works
of art. In such an atmosphere, Thenuwara's efforts acquire a significant
value.
The word "camouflage" means a change in one's appearance,
especially the natural colouring of animals or painted objects,
in order to adapt to environmental conditions. For example, this
word is widely applied to the disguising of military uniforms,
vehicles and equipment by painting them or covering them to make
them blend into their surroundings. Thenuwara also uses the term
"camouflage" in this precise meaning.
Last year, he held an unorthodox exhibition with steel barrels,
which reminded us of the Dadaist works in the early decades of
the century. He called it Barrelism. In this exhibit,
Thenuwara showed how black steel barrels, which contained asphalt
used to pave the roads, were camouflaged. He had a
strong interpretation of the piece of art he created with these
barrels:
"Once upon a time there was a barrel. It was used as a
container and was 35" in height, 23" in diameter, cylindrical
in shape.
"I first saw this barrel alongside the roads when I was
a child. It was on a fire. Workers took boiling tar from it to
cover the road. I was happy because roads were being constructed
and roads reduced the distance between relatives and friends.
Roads also brought villages closer to towns and linked regions.
"With the war, that innocent barrel changed. It was camouflaged
colourfully with paint. Many barrels invaded the towns and cities,
including Colombo. These barrels became a part of the landscape.
They created barrelscapes' (exhibition catalogue,
June 1998, "The story of a barrel").
Thenuwara's latest exhibition could be identified as a further
progression in his concept of Barrelism. This time, instead of
putting colour on barrels, he paints some tragic experiences faced
by Sri Lankan society under militarism and the racist war against
the Tamils in the North and East of the country. Here also he
has given priority to jungle colours.
Generally, in representative art, the purpose of the background
of a painting is to enhance and intensify the feelings, emotions
and thoughts expressed by the content and released through images.
But in Thenuwara's paintings the camouflage background is also
an image. On many occasions, in fact, the background itself emerges
as the principal image. It identifies the war and the military
power of the state as lying behind the social problems that are
depicted in his paintings. Hence he creates different paintings
with the same background. Indeed, the image is so strong that
he manages to elevate the mere background into the basis of perfectly
independent works (e.g.., Camouflageii and iii).
This is a very rare accomplishment, which could be acquired only
by mastering the art form.
Apart from that, Thenuwara also shows his skill in graphic
artengraving, etching and aquatint techniques. Here, however,
the viewer mostly experiences a sense of monotony because the
artist presents the very same pictures already displayed in colour.
Some of the distinguished works in the exhibit include the
following:
Thousand Barrels i (acrylic on plywood): A beautiful
barrel design. The large plywood sheet (96" x 48") is
completely covered with many small barrels placed close to each
other from top to bottom and from left to right, reminding us
of the militarisation of the entire country, without sparing any
nook or cranny. The other version, Thousand Barrelsii
(oil on canvas), differing only in size (43.5" x 32.5")
and colour combination, could be regarded as a masterpiece. These
two works alone are enough to indicate that Thenuwara's art has
attained an international level. Indeed, these barrel designs
deserve to be compared to the compositions of Mondrian or the
abstract works of Jackson Pollock.
Victor (oil on canvas): A soldier who walks towards
the front with the aid of a crutch and the other hand turned into
a rifle, also used as a crutch. His entire head is covered with
a combat helmet. Here lies an implied meaning: the mercenary has
no head, no independent thought. He only has a body, which obeys
orders coming from the top. The red background symbolises the
river of blood stretching behind the so-called victory.
Madonnai and ii (oil on canvas): These are not
portraits of Mary and child as the title suggests,
but nursing mothers who are victims of a racist war and militarism,
as the camouflage background informs us.
Untitled (oil on canvas): Several females widowed or
displaced due to the war. This painting also emphasises the fact
that most sufferers of the war are female.
Untitled (aquatint): A small statue of Buddha on a camouflaged
barrel. Expressed with a sharp irony, it not only makes use of
Buddhism as a scapegoat for the racist war, but also shows the
military as the guardian of the religion.
On the basis of a viewing of these works one feels that Thenuwara
is the foremost painter in Sri Lanka at present. He is exploring
territory where no one has gone before. However, there is an important
point to which the artist's attention should be drawn: There is
no way of transforming his Barrelism into a common artistic style
such as cubism, expressionism, impressionism, etc., because it
bears a specific meaning only under the conditions of war.
Therefore, Thenuwara is confronted with the question as to
whether he should remain with Barrelism or emerge from that framework
to paint other experiences. Thenuwara clearly has the intuition
and the skill necessary to undertake that challenge.
Note:
*George Keyt (1901-93) was the most celebrated
Sri Lankan artist of the century.
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