Hashan Cooray's detailed portraiture captures the complexity of the human psyche across a blend of charcoal and acrylic on canvas, resulting in crowded compositions that draw out themes of violence and desire through coiled lines, collaged texts, and cold colours.
Read MoreIn 2016, Cooray was invited to make work for Re-Imaging Ceylon, a book project by the Imago Mundi Collection.
The untitled 2016 portrait included in the book shows the face of an agreeable woman rendered from short strokes of powder blue and white, while drops of red fall across her forehead and lips.
The following year, Cooray held his first solo exhibition at Art Space Sri Lanka, Lab Rats (2017), which featured equally bright pastel works on paper responding to the corruption of the pharmaceutical industry as a reflection of individual subordination to social norms.
Cooray's second solo show and first exhibition with Saskia Fernando, Parahumans (2019), traced the evolution of mankind to ask if we have remained the same as our ape ancestors or whether we are part of the dawning of a new species, beyond homo sapiens.
Here, explosive figurative portraits blending thin acrylic lines with smeared charcoal capture the beauty of mankind in all its brutishness, deceit, and violence. Inscribed with indistinct words and alphabet letters, mixed-media series like 'Masochist Poem' (2019) sought to write 'a new chapter in the book of evolution'.
Accordingly, in Masochist Poem V (2019), the outline of a face intersects with explosive yellow bouquets as the figure looks over in confrontation, as if to challenge existing interpretations, while a crimson square inscribed with text over his right eye remains unreadable.
With increasing self-awareness, later works cleverly allude to the nuances of representation, be it a thought, an emotion, or a figure, by juxtaposing the initial image with what could be its echo. In MY EMPTY HANDS AND MIND II (2019), a diptych shows gestural scribbles on the left that are repeated on the right within a contained cube, while Untitled 06 (2021) features the face of a man rendered in red against green above an icon of smaller head on brown paper, referring to the artist's many brown paper charcoal portraits.