This exhibition features around 100 pieces of work, both large and small, done in the past year, with poster colours and gel pens on Ferigoni art paper and Canford cartridge paper.
Priya displays a rare ability to fill up surfaces adequately and meaningfully through line and colour.
With a distinctive individuality of her own, her un-influenced quest for beauty is untutored and undirected, thus making her spontaneous work a remarkable collection.
The exhibition showcases a varied genre of paintings and portrays her dexterity, simplicity and spontaneity which speak directly to the spectator.
Her themes relate to the real and imagined world in a very intimate means of expression.
In her inimitable style she paints with her inner feelings, portraying a depth in images of tree-scapes and land-scapes in a host of vibrant colours and line drawings that give strength and stability, in emphatic patterns and movement.
She has been showcasing her work since 1972 with annual exhibitions of the Ceylon Society of Arts, at the Xll Biennal de Sao Paulo and at Kala Pola.
Educated at Visakha Vidyalaya and very much a self-taught artist, Priya Goonetileke says her greatest inspiration was her father the art critic, journalist and diplomat the late L.P. Goonetilleke.
Regular visitors to the Goonetilleke home at Dehiwela were his close friends such as LTP Manjusri, George Keyt, Justin Deraniyagala, ACGS Amarasekera etc.
“I’m fortunate to have been exposed to the work of these great artists for a very early age”, she says.
Priya Goonetilleke may be contacted at e: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.