Interview Gallery Founder and Director Saskia Fernando
THE WICK: Talk us through a typical Monday.
Saskia Fernando: I’m up at dawn to have some quiet time before the day begins. In the months leading up to KALĀ the pace of everything picks up so work meetings can begin early. There’s no typical day for me and we just opened our second gallery space in Colombo. I try my best to fit in visits to both spaces daily, hold meetings with our clients, patrons and make studio visits as regularly as possible. I try to keep my afternoons free to be with my six year old and manage any afternoon zooms, most often on UK time, when on the move. Needless to say, I go to sleep early!
TW: You are the Founder of the eponymous Saskia Fernando Gallery in 2009 which nurtures emerging artists within the region and the largest contemporary art gallery in Sri Lanka. How did you begin?
SF: I grew up surrounded by art and it’s quite clear to me now that this way of life was ingrained in me at quite a young age. My father’s collecting and relationship with artists no doubt made my beginning in the arts seamless. I began working in the art world as my father’s protégée at Paradise Road Galleries in my early 20s where I managed his exhibition space and this was where I was first introduced to many of Sri Lanka’s leading contemporary practitioners. I founded my own space in 2009 inspired by the relationships I had formed; I was in my late twenties at this point and began with a very small gallery and a group of artists keen to support my plan.
TW: How has the gallery evolved since then?
SF: Sixteen years later I continue to work with many of the same practitioners, that is something I am very proud of. This year our journey came full circle and we rebranded the gallery as PRSFG (Paradise Road Saskia Fernando Gallery) to merge the strengths of our family’s vision for art and culture with the work of SFG. I have always believed in organic growth, we have developed alongside the local industry and we owe this to the vibrancy and momentum of the contemporary art world in Sri Lanka.
TW: What is the biggest challenge and conversely biggest opportunity in bringing Sri Lankan art to the global stage?
SF: We share many of the same issues that the global south face in establishing the identity and roots of our non-Western art histories. Today, as a gallery in Sri Lanka, which might be considered remote in some aspects, I try to gain visibility for our work via collaborations with other galleries internationally to deal with these challenges. As a result we have worked with galleries in Los Angeles, London, Dubai, Singapore and India. The opportunity for us has always been positioned in our rich cultural heritage and the scene itself that has been active throughout times of crisis.