Camillus Perera

Kala Keerthi Camillus Perera is a Sri Lankan cartoonist. His cartoon characters like Gajaman and Siribiris have been published in various Sinhala newspapers ranging from the Sunday Observer to Sivdesa. Perera was invited to join the advisory board of John Lent's Cartoon Journal in 2002.

Camillus Perera
Camillus Perera
BornCamillus Perera
Negombo, Sri Lanka
NationalitySri Lankan
Area(s)Writer, Editor, Publisher, Producer
Notable works
Gajaman
Don Sethan
Siribiris
Dekkoth Pathmawathi

Life and career

Early life

Perera was born in Negombo and was the eldest son in a family of four. He was educated at the Roman Catholic Sinhala School, Maris Stella and St. Mary's College, Negombo. Perera first dabbled in art in the lower grades. He also briefly pursued a career as a sportsman in his teens leading the Jupiter Football Association in Negombo.[1]

Cartoonist

Perera began work as a cartoonist in 1966 developing characters for the Observer and "Dekkoth Pathmawathi" for Lake House's film magazine.[2] In 1972 he created Gajaman, his most popular character. Gajaman first appeared on Sathuta, a Lake House comic art publication and from 1975 to 1984 occupied a spot on the comic publication Sittara.[3]

Perera's characters

In April 1984 Perera produced a magazine devoted to his work titled Camillusge Gajaman. Its success, with over 200,000 copies sold, prompted the followups Camillusge Samayan in December and Camillusge Gajaman #2 the next year. Both sold between 200,000300,000 copies and resulted in the formation of Camillus Publications. Perera cited copyright issues as a primary reason for the creation of his new company. He subsequently registered his 15 characters with the Department of Registry and Patents.[2]

Camillusge Gajaman Samaga Sathsiri (later shortened to Sathsiri) released in 1986 was the first comic magazine by Camillus Publications and immediately sold over 150,000 copies eventually achieving a circulation of 200,000. Their second magazine Camillusge Don Sethan Samaga Rasika (shortened to Rasika) followed the misadventures of Don Sethan, Perera's oldest creation. Don Sethan first appeared in the daily Janath on May 1, 1966.[2]

In the 1990s Perera worked on several periodicals including a weekly comic magazine.[2]

Legacy

Several exhibitions of Perera work have been held. In 2002 Perera celebrated Gajaman's 36th birthday at BMICH, Colombo 7 with chief guest Power and Energy Minister Karu Jayasuriya.[3] In 2004 Alliance Francaise de Kandy sponsored an exhibition which was opened by Professor Kapila Goonasekere, Vice Chancellor of the University of Peradeniya.[1] A 3D animated film named as Gajaman is being produced by Studio 101.

gollark: But it would have the word "shampoo" on it, see.
gollark: But it says "shampoo" on it.
gollark: But you *would* buy something saying "SULFURIC ACID - NOT SHAMPOO"?
gollark: Well, if it's in a shampoo-shaped bottle with "SULFURIC ACID" on it and you just ignore that...
gollark: What if it says "SULFURIC ACID - NOT SHAMPOO"?

References

  1. "Camillus cartoons in Kandy". Sunday Observer. 2004. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-07-22.
  2. Lent, John (2001). Illustrating Asia: Comics, Humor Magazines and Pictures Books. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-2471-7.
  3. "Anthology of Camillus cartoons at BMICH". Sunday Observer. 2002. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-07-22.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.