Marlon Ariyasinghe

Playwright 

In his first production in Silicon Valley, Marlon Ariyasinghe examines the core of diasporic identity, an encounter between traditional artforms from the home country and the self-awareness about their "representation" in Western spaces. In Exorcism: A Ritual Performance (2025), Amaya, a Sri Lankan-American visits a museum where artefacts from Sri Lanka are on exhibition. By using a museum in the West as a setting and incorporating elements of Sri Lankan folklore, such as Riri Yaka and Rukada puppetry, the play draws attention to colonial history and personal diasporic identity, and examines the themes of decolonization, repatriation, and cultural restoration. Marlon Ariyasinghe is a PhD student at Stanford University. 

  • Marlon Ariyasinghe
    In his first production in Silicon Valley, Marlon Ariyasinghe examines the core of diasporic identity, an encounter between traditional artforms from the home country and the self-awareness about their "representation" in Western spaces. In Exorcism: A Ritual Performance (2025), Amaya, a Sri Lankan-American visits a museum where artefacts from Sri Lanka are on exhibition. By using a museum in the West as a setting and incorporating elements of Sri Lankan folklore, such as Riri Yaka and Rukada puppetry, the play draws attention to colonial history and personal diasporic identity, and examines the themes of decolonization, repatriation, and cultural restoration. Marlon Ariyasinghe is a PhD student at Stanford University.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Set in a museum and incorporating elements of Sri Lankan folklore, colonial history, and personal identity, the play examines the themes of decolonization, repatriation, and cultural restoration.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Amaya, a Sri Lankan-American visits a museum where artefacts from Sri Lanka are on exhibition. She encounters Riri Yaka, Jr, a Sri Lankan mythical demon, among the museum artifacts.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Rukada puppetry is used as a tool to critique contemporary Sri Lankan politics; a traditional form highlights the intersection between folklore and political realities.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Stolen Sri Lankan cultural artefacts, such as traditional masks, in Western musuem spaces critique colonization. The integration of Kolam and Rukada masks and the embodiment of the mythical and supernatural figure of Riri Yaka, inform the moment when the fragmented identity of the diasporic Amaya recognizes the agency of cultural reclamation.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    As the Riri Yaka figure and Amaya try to recliam the cultural artefacts, security personnel stops them from "stealing" museum property.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Recliaming one's cultural identity is never easy.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Seemingly defeated, Amaya and human-looking Riri Yaka are inhibited by Western museum policies.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    A museum space can feel like a sepulchre for performative arts and traditions; here, the brief agency of the Sri Lankans is squashed when they are relegated to becoming motionless museum artefacts.
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    In a psychosocial framework, can the artefacts regain agency and take control of the narrative of their past and current identity?
  • Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Exorcism: A Ritual Performance
    Can the fractured identity among the diaspora become whole when they fully embrace and celebrate their roots with their feet planted in their diasporic lives?
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