Abstract:
In the last years more contemporary art from Asian countries was shown in major art
exhibitions like the documents, various biennials, etc. The relationship between postcolonialism
and cultural development came into the discussions with texts by Edward
Said, Stuart Hall, Gayatrie Spivcak, Homi Bhaba and others questioning binary
oppositions and hierarchical relations.
In the context of art history or better art science this means to question binary
oppositions like high and low culture, centre and periphery, original and copy, etc.
Especially in the Anglo-American discussions new terms like hybridity and heterotopias,
contact-zone and transgression, identity and nation became relevant.
In the discourse in German speaking countries, these topics are slowly gaining
awareness but are often still considered under an anthropological or ethnological
perspective.
This research project develops an approach to contemporary art in Sri Lanka and
especially its developments during the last decade of the 20th century. To appreciate the
individual artistic production on its own right, the project concentrates on five artist
personalities: Anoli Perera, Jagath Weerasinghe, Druvinka Madawela, Chandraguptha
Tenuwara and Koronegela Pushpakumar. For a better understanding and to reflect the
perspective of the author’s outside point of view it combines the analysis of art works
with interviews. In the interviews the artists speak about their artworks, their ideas, selfconcepts
and their understanding of own role as artists in contemporary Sri Lankan
society as well as art immanent questions related to technique and media. Major topics
in this context are changing concepts of identities as artists, women, men or as
members of the new middle class as well as the relation of art and politics in the face of
the current political situation and the ongoing cultural globalisation.