Sri Lanka – Modern Perspectives from an Ancient Melting Pot
This episode features a conversation with Irushi Tenekoon, an award-winning animator from Sri Lanka. Dee and Irushi discuss her journey into animation, her work on 'The Animate Her Series', and her film about Minnette de Silva, a pioneering female architect in 1950s Sri Lanka. Despite her innovative approach to social housing and significant contributions, Minnette's work has been undervalued until now and conversations cover what Minnette did for architecture. The episode emphasises the importance of highlighting Sri Lankan stories and talents on international platforms to challenge mainstream narratives and celebrate local heroes.
Summary
00:00 Introduction to the Podcast
00:47 Meet Arushi TennoCon: Animator and Educator
02:44 Arushi's Creative Journey
05:53 The Animator Series: Celebrating Heroines
16:25 The Minette de Silva Project
36:15 The Importance of Diverse Narratives
39:27 Current and Future Projects
Irushi Tenekoon is an award winning animator, illustrator and educator based in Colombo, Sri Lanka. She teaches animation to undergraduates part time at the Academy of Design in Colombo and spends the rest of her time working on illustrating and animating stories from Sri Lanka and South Asia out of her home studio. While starting out as a self taught artist, she recently completed her MA in Animation at the Royal College of Art in London supported by a Chevening Scholarship from the UK’s FCDO. Her notable work includes:
To learn more about her work visit www.irusdedoodles.com
Dee Gibson is the award winning designer and founder of boutique hotel Kalukanda House in Sri Lanka, www.kalukandahouse.com ~ Conde Nast Best Places to Visit in Asia 2024 & HIP Hotels Best Hotels 2025. You can follow on
instagram @deegibson2017 or @kalukandahouse
This podcast lifts the veil on what, and more importantly WHO this island is with conversations about all the things you never read about in the travel pages. Dee showcases a fascinating modern society reclaiming their identity and taking ownership of their narratives on the global stage. No subject is taboo so expect guests talking about everything from activism through art and yoga, why sari was modified by British colonisers, a performance on love and lust to episodes on forgotten heroines being narrated back into our history books and much more.