Michella Perera, image courtesy of the artist.

24/04/25—10/05/25

Michella Perera—Entangled in the History of the Idea

Opening:
6–8pm Thursday 24th April
Exhibition runs:
Friday 25th April – Saturday 10th May

Pallas Projects/Studios are pleased to present Michella Perera—Entangled in the History of the Idea , the second exhibition of our 2025 Artist-Initiated Projects programme.

On still dry days, the air above the hot tarmac melts forming a curdling shape that drifts back and forth. From a distance it resembles the reptilian gait of a monitor that swings its body as it moves, flicking its tongue to gather the scent of sweat, spice and hair oils. Another hour has passed and again the person that leaves the house is unidentifiable in mismatched clothes covering their entire form from the sun. Their Bata slippers crack metronomically until they walk right up to the young rice, drying on the heated road. The rice-keeper places their bare calloused feet methodically on one corner in anticipation of thousands of tiny movements beneath their soles. 

***

The pungent reminder of this afternoon’s durian stagnates through the out-kitchen, refusing to escape into the fresh air. Like a tired traveller, it lingers in the heat, bathing in the sun. There is a calmness reserved for the day after a full moon, when the Dhane leftovers that occupy shelves in the fridges waive the culinary hold on Aunty’s hands. Instead she meanders in her garden, using human lady fingers to inspect vegetative lady fingers. Names in her country are like tributaries, eventually flowing into a much more persuasive river. “Okra” she reminds herself but the word carries so little of the characteristics of the pointed pod. 

***

Entangled in the History of the Idea invites viewers into a speculative world built from an archive of shared storytelling, particularly within South Asian immigrant communities. Michella Perera’s acrylic paintings explore the paracosmos of a series of unidentified and highly pigmented women as they realise a more personal and intimate relationship to cultural material, forgoing traditional practices. Through their hands and feet, they extrude tactile knowledge, delineating an idiosyncratic understanding of their heritage and indigenous plant lore. Relief textile patterns punctuate the paintings, reminiscent of traditionally carved architectural elements, now reconfigured in the feminine practice of textile manipulation. Through these peculiar rituals the female protagonists reclaim the agency to create and structure their world - a place suggestive of ancestral worlds, compiled from nuanced cultural memories.

An arrangement of ceramic vessels preface an unseen ceremony. Ranging from instruments to measuring devices, they form the objects through which the vibrant protagonists actualize their individuated myths. The biophilic decorations, sensual in form, are indicative of a sorority (sisterhood) of human, cultural and botanic agents intersecting to produce an image of fossilised abundance. The vessels are suggestive of a performance, though they remain unused, relegated to an archival state. This archival silence speaks to a contemporary disassociation with the natural world, emphasising a deeper desire to regain a lost ecocentrism.

The exhibition draws its title from a quote by Paul Gilroy in The Black Atlantic “The especially crude and reductive notions of culture that form the substance of racial politics today are clearly associated with an older discourse of racial and ethnic difference which is everywhere entangled in the history of the idea of culture in the modern West.” 

Perera is drawn to the constantly shifting practice of myth-making that arises from personal interactions, movement, miscommunication and translation. The ensuing worlds develop adjacent to notions of “authenticity,” drawing its power, not from a prescriptive adherence to historic ideas but an evolving understanding of the self in relation to cultural material. 

Michella Perera, image courtesy of the artist.

Event

Batik Dyeing Workshop

Saturday 3rd May & Saturday 10th May

On May 3rd and 10th, artist Michella Perera will be running a Batik workshop at Pallas Projects/Studios. This 2 day workshop (2.5 hours long) is open to adults over 18 who, emigrated to Ireland from a country with a history of Batik dying. Participants do not need previous experience. They are encouraged to share their connection to this cultural dying process.

Participants must be able to attend both dates

Only 8 spaces available so book now on Eventbrite 

Biography:

Michella Perera is a Sri Lankan-Irish artist who graduated from Glasgow School of Art in 2017  with an MFA. Her practice incorporates participatory events which function as a research tool, allowing her to explore the impact of cultural practices on communities, and integrate in the shared storytelling of neighbourhoods. Having moved from Sri Lanka, she explores the sensorial story of movement, cultural taboo, and the solidarity/empowerment of women.

Her work draws on Ayurvedic practices which use plants, herbs and spices as tools for healing in the Indian subcontinent highlighting indigenous culinary knowledge, medical practices & ethnobotany. Recently she took part in the Serendipity Arts Festival in Goa, India and the TEST Space residency at the Limerick City  Gallery of Art. Instagram:

@michellaperera

Website: michellaperera.com

Artist-Initiated Projects at Pallas Projects/Studios is an open-submission, annual gallery programme of 8 x 3-week exhibitions taking place from March-November 2025. This unique programme of funded, artist-initiated projects selected via open call is highly accessible to artists, with a focus on early career, emerging artists and recent graduates. Projects are supplemented with artists' talks, texts, workshops or performances, and gallery visits by colleges and local schools.