주소: BTDC Area Block P, Benoa, South Kuta, Badung Regency
Situated in the Nusa Dua complex on the south end of the island, the Pasifika Museum is the island’s newest museum but is already among the top fifty tourist attractions. Inaugurated by Moetaryanto P. and Philippe Augier in 2006, designed by famed Balinese architect Popo Danes, with its eight pavilions and eleven exhibition halls, it is a renowned cultural centre of great social and educational importance. In the entrance pavilion, a cafe area welcomes visitors, diplomats, travellers, scholars and Balinese residents, all fascinated by the more than 600 works of art, an increasingly growing collection of paintings and sculptures, created by 200 artists from 25 different nations, all of whom lived in Pacific Asia and found inspiration for their precious masterpieces. Despite having only opened relatively recently, the museum has already received numerous awards and accolades, including a WCF Award in 2013, the Indonesian Ministry of Tourism Prize of 2014 and the Sustainable Museum Prize for 2018 - 2019 (IMA). It is considered one of the best museums in Indonesia. In the halls of the Pasifika Museum, works of Indonesian artists are flanked by artists from India and Europe who lived in Indonesia and became fascinated by the customs and traditions of this remarkable population, as well as other artists from Asia and Southeast Asia from countries such as Laos, Vietnam, Polynesia, Oceania, Japan, China, Thailand and Myanmar.
Located within a large forest of nutmeg trees, Pura Bukit Sari was built in the 17th century as a meditation temple by the son of the King of Mengwi. It is certainly an evocative place, especially at dawn, when the monkeys come down from the trees to feed while the rays of the early morning sun filter through the tree canopy.
Written by Balinese scholar Professor I Made Bandem and American art historian Bruce W. Carpenter, this stunning study of masks as an ancient art form is a richly illustrated book, with over 1000 color images by photographer Doddy Obenk.
Natural pigments & dyes in Balinese traditional crafts
Colors play a vital role in Balinese culture and identity: they are symbolic and their origins are sacred. Traditional Balinese arts and crafts arise from the interconnection between man, the forces of nature and the cosmos, resulting in a divine unity.
Pura Sada Kapal: the temple that changes for faith and for the ages
The vicissitudes linked to its destruction due to an earthquake and its reconstruction due to the faith of the inhabitants of the village in which it is located, make it a place with a fascinating and unique history and appearance.