Heritage of the wise men and women
Our great friend
Headlong
A bigger friend
Jackfruit tree
Tamil tea pickers
Tea shrubs in beautiful nature of Sri Lankan mount…
Saint and the camera
Sky, water and buffalo
Land of the elephants
Peacock in action
Gilt-Silver Kylix in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Gilt-Silver Kylix in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Marble Statuette of Hekate in the Metropolitan Mus…
Marble Statuette of Hekate in the Metropolitan Mus…
Caeretian Hydria Attributed to the Eagle Painter i…
Caeretian Hydria Attributed to the Eagle Painter i…
Detail of a Caeretian Hydria Attributed to the Eag…
Detail of a Caeretian Hydria Attributed to the Eag…
Marble Relief with Hermes in the Metropolitan Muse…
Marble Relief with Hermes in the Metropolitan Muse…
August 2017
Bronze Statuette of Hermes in the Metropolitan Mus…
Detail of a Bronze Statuette of Hermes in the Metr…
Terracotta Hydria Attributed to the Troilos Painte…
Terracotta Hydria Attributed to the Troilos Painte…
Detail of a Terracotta Hydria Attributed to the Tr…
Detail of a Terracotta Hydria Attributed to the Tr…
Terracotta Banquet Group in the Metropolitan Museu…
Terracotta Kalpis Attributed to the Syleus Painter…
Terracotta Kalpis Attributed to the Syleus Painter…
Terracotta Lekythos with Poseidon, Herakles, and H…
Terracotta Lekythos with Poseidon, Herakles, and H…
Like a picture
Not Japan
Paradise garden
Unknown fruit, hanging like a testicle
m’ friend the tree
Club villa
This is a boutique hotel
Place of peace
Unusual garden
Randomly placed
Boutique hotel
Heaven of an architecture, imagine you live here
Open air bathroom
Indecent proposal
Garden magic gate
Rare black orchid
Briefly from the garden
Colours, shapes, nature
Yellow, green and blue
DSC 2752
Flo
DSC 2745
Freedom life of apes
DSC 2735
DSC 2726
Handsome
Glare of old times
Little Netherlands here
Tea breeze
Shy smile
You cannot stop the nature
Decorate my wall
Keywords
Sunny afternoon
Geoffrey Manning Bawa (23 July 1919 – 27 May 2003) was a Sri Lankan architect. He is the most renowned architect in Sri Lanka and was among the most influential Asian architects of his generation. He is the principal force behind what is today known globally as "Tropical Modernism".
He was born half British, and being orphaned at a very early age. He got his Law degree from London and came back to Sri Lanka to work as a lawyer, following the Bawa family tradition. He soon grew weary of being a lawyer and went on a vacation to Italy where he was utterly captivated by the Italian gardens and had to resist buying an Italian lake house. This is where tropical, Mediterranean architecture and landscaping got stuck in his head. He came back to Sri Lanka and bought a rubber plantation in the Bentota area in 1948, to make his own garden home. However, finding that he lacked in skills and technicalities, he left for London to study as an architect. In 1957, he was a qualified architect and back home. He began planning and designing his Lunuganga country home. He took serious inspiration from Italian renaissance gardens and gave it a subtle modern twist.
Geoffrey and his brother Bevis were part of a milieu of sophisticated homosexuals who were drawn to the idea of Ceylon as a place of beauty, sensuality and escape. Bawa's architecture is at one with the land: inside and outside blend seamlessly, and it is designed for the maximum pleasure of its inhabitants. He was influenced by colonial and traditional Ceylonese architecture, and the role of water in it, but rejected both the idea of regionalism and the imposition of preconceived forms onto a site.
Bawa became an Associate of the Sri Lanka Institute of Architects in 1960. An ensuing close association with a coterie of like-minded artists and designers, including Ena de Silva, Barbara Sansoni and Laki Senanayake, produced a new awareness of indigenous materials and crafts, leading to a post-colonial renaissance of culture.
He was born half British, and being orphaned at a very early age. He got his Law degree from London and came back to Sri Lanka to work as a lawyer, following the Bawa family tradition. He soon grew weary of being a lawyer and went on a vacation to Italy where he was utterly captivated by the Italian gardens and had to resist buying an Italian lake house. This is where tropical, Mediterranean architecture and landscaping got stuck in his head. He came back to Sri Lanka and bought a rubber plantation in the Bentota area in 1948, to make his own garden home. However, finding that he lacked in skills and technicalities, he left for London to study as an architect. In 1957, he was a qualified architect and back home. He began planning and designing his Lunuganga country home. He took serious inspiration from Italian renaissance gardens and gave it a subtle modern twist.
Geoffrey and his brother Bevis were part of a milieu of sophisticated homosexuals who were drawn to the idea of Ceylon as a place of beauty, sensuality and escape. Bawa's architecture is at one with the land: inside and outside blend seamlessly, and it is designed for the maximum pleasure of its inhabitants. He was influenced by colonial and traditional Ceylonese architecture, and the role of water in it, but rejected both the idea of regionalism and the imposition of preconceived forms onto a site.
Bawa became an Associate of the Sri Lanka Institute of Architects in 1960. An ensuing close association with a coterie of like-minded artists and designers, including Ena de Silva, Barbara Sansoni and Laki Senanayake, produced a new awareness of indigenous materials and crafts, leading to a post-colonial renaissance of culture.
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