Rajni Perera's stunning sci-fi neo-Amazonians — in pictures
Afrika Galaktika, Crafts series explore fantastical worlds full of people of colour
In 2011, I accompanied my best friend to a small art gallery to make her first "serious" investment in a piece of art. For hours after, she gushed about how transformative it had been to see this work that centered brown female bodies and how inspired she had been to dig into her savings — and overdraft — so that she could take home one of these cosmic, magnificently imagined and (arguably) controversial images. The creator of that art: Sri Lankan born and Toronto based visual artist Rajni Perera.
I have investigated many avenues but here in North America I get the most attention for the ones where I talk about being a brown woman.- Rajni Perera, artist
Perera's work calls upon a number of visual references including, sci-fi, manga, Rajput and Mughal miniaturisim, Blaxploitation, Afrofuturism, paleontology, futurism, magical realism, scientific illustration and Tantric art. I find myself drawn to her aesthetic, this type of layered visual landscape that speaks across a galaxy of inspirations, illustrating the complexity and nuance of Diasporic identities. Much of Perera's work invites viewers into a world where history, mythology and the contemporary collide. Over the years, it has led me down a number of internet rabbit holes, from learning about the Hindu goddess Kali to looking up images from the Hubble Deep Field Telescope.
Perera's art has been exhibited in Canada, the U.S., Germany and Sri Lanka. This month she exhibits several new pieces including a mural at the 37th Rhubarb theatre festival at Buddies In Bad Times theatre in Toronto. I spoke with Perera by e-mail about her work.
Tell me about what you are exhibiting at Rhubarb.
For the Rhubarb Festival I was invited by the lovely Mel Hague to exhibit in their Ante Chamber, so I responded with a mural on their garage door and five new pieces called Crafts