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Nov 7, 2017

Lionel Wendt, the Oscar Wilde of Colombo

Lionel Wendt (1900-1944) was a photographer, cinematographer, pianist and scholar, who had a profound impact on the development of the fine arts in Sri Lanka (then Ceylon, a British colony until 1948).

















Of Ceylon-Dutch ancestry, Wendt studied law in London and practiced for awhile in Colombo, the capital of British Ceylon, but soon dedicated himself to his music.  Aside from being a concert pianist, he was a cinematographer, photographer, artist, literary critic (he imported books from London by the bushel), teacher, and patron of the arts.







He and his friends wore their hair long, wore flamboyant costumes, and delighted in scandalizing the Colombo blue-bloods.  He was big and brash and open, as one could be in Ceylon in the 1930s, the Oscar Wilde of Colombo.

His photography shows the influence of European modernism.






Yet Wendt was not just a Eurocentric flaneur; he wanted to develop a distinctly Sri Lankan vision.  He published photographs of rural Ceylon (Lionel Wendt's Ceylon, 1950), and spearheaded the documentary Song of Ceylon.  He brought two traditional dancers to England to film.

He organized the Photographic Society of Ceylon and the Colombo 43 Art Group.  There's a Lionel Wendt Art Center in Colombo, with two galleries and a theater dedicated to his memory.










He photographed many of his male lovers, creating an image of Ceylon as a homoerotic paradise that remains firmly embedded in the popular imagination today.
















Yet none of the many articles and retrospectives published in Sri Lanka today mention that he was gay.  Seventy years after his death, Lionel Wendt is still closeted in his homeland.

2 comments:

  1. I'm thrilled you covered Lionel Wendt!I'm from Sri Lanka and the Lionel Wendt theatre is the hub of the Colombo Drama Scene. It is actually quite hard to find information if him, in fact I didn't even know he had long hair in his youth!

    While most everyone in the theatre circle knows that he was gay possibly bisexual, I couldn't find any trace of it in any archive because of course it's covered up. In fact the theatre is more well known than the person, and it's history is well documented.

    I'm more curious as to why Sri Lanka is known as a gay paradise? A notable number of Westerners have come to SL, such as Gordon Merrick, true but I wasn't aware SL was known as such...

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    1. Thanks for your note. I got the biographical details about Wendt from two articles published in the Netherlands and Robert Aldrich's "Gay Lives." Sri Lanka as a "gay paradise", even though same-sex acts are illegal there, comes from an article I read a long time ago, as well as knowledge of some gay Westerners who have settled in Sri Lanka, like Arthur C. Clarke. The main "gay paradise" of the 19th century was the Mediterranean, southern Italy and North Africa.

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