Join Books.org — it's free

Indonesia - History, Australian & Oceanic Studies - Indonesia, Southeast Asia & Oceania Architecture, Asian Studies - Southeast Asia - Indonesia, Interior Design - Architecture, Decorating - History & Pictorials
Indonesia Style by Clifford A. Pearson — book cover

Indonesia Style

by Clifford A. Pearson
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

The island nation of Indonesia — the largest and most populous country in Southeast Asia — balances equal parts of custom and change. As gleaming skyscrapers rise in major cities, traditional design and ways of living remain extremely important. This visual paean to Indonesia's visual and artistic culture is both a wonderful source of design inspiration and a fascinating armchair tour of the multifaceted nation. Lavish new color photography of houses and interiors, bazaars and markets, mosques and temples, festivals and celebrations, shadow puppet theater and masked dance, gives the reader a sense of daily life in Indonesia.

The book is divided into four major island regions: Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi, and Bali. At the heart of each is a presentation of houses, more than twenty in all. The house in Indonesia, as in many other countries, is considered a complete environment. The many faces of residential design shown in the book, from humble cottages in agricultural areas to royal palaces, evoke personal stylistic sensibilities, encompassing both age-old local traditions and contemporary trends with a Southeast Asian flair. Furnishings, fabrics, objects — all are featured as part of these remarkable works. Interviews with the owners and detailed commentary offer a comprehensive insider's tour of the principles of Indonesian design.

About the Author, Clifford A. Pearson

Clifford Pearson, associate editor at Architectural Record, has been an architecture and design critic for fifteen years. He has written for the New York Times, Metropolis, Art & Antiques, and New York Magazine, among others.

Bryan Whitney is a photographer who has worked for Art & Antiques, the New York Times, House Beautiful, Metropolitan Home, Colonial Homes, Better Homes and Gardens, Harper's Bazaar, and Metropolis. He has lectured on and taught photography, and his work has been widely exhibited.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Architectural Record

The work is a thorough survey, revealing what is modern, traditional, imported, inventive, and--to us--unusual in Indonesian design. The plurality of cultures and building practices makes generalization risky. "Indonesian," after all, may only mean what the regime wants it to mean. Pearson, however, finds meaningful commonalities among the major cultures he surveys. Indonesians, he writes, are bold designers, brave enough to be open to nature, combine clashing elements, and absorb foreign influences.

Booknews

Explores four of the largest and most populated islands of the Indonesian archipelago: Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi, and Bali. Beautiful color photographs document about 20 houses new and old, as well as their furnishings and decoration. The owners and designers offer insights into the creation of each work. The volume also presents important historic and cultural sites, and 18 photo essays display elements of daily life (such as shadow puppets, daily food markets, carvings, and rice fields). No index. Oversize: 9.5x11.5<"> Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknew.com)

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1998
Publisher
Monacelli Press
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781580930123

Similar books