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Barry Dawson

    LebensArt Cuba
    Street Graphics India
    Blind Eye Turning
    Traditional Indonesian Textiles
    • 2005

      Blind Eye Turning

      • 126 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Exploring a range of emotions, this collection of original poetry and prose reflects nearly a decade of personal experiences and empathy. The work delves into various romantic relationships, capturing the complexities of regret, loyalty, betrayal, and adoration. Each piece is infused with acerbic wit and clever wordplay, guiding readers through the nuanced landscapes of love and human connection over the past five years.

      Blind Eye Turning
    • 1999

      Street Graphics India

      • 111 pages
      • 4 hours of reading

      Much of today's most exuberant, most creative, and most telling imagery is all around us, in the street. Nowhere is the visual cornucopia more striking than in India, whose roads are a continuous gallery of images vibrantly portraying the country's rich cultural diversity. From Arabian Sea to Indian Ocean, Northern Himalayas to southernmost tip, the subcontinent's overlapping parade of art and design excites the eyes. Street furniture, architecture, transport, billboards, posters, packaging, animals, and people are all used as the media of calculated design and spontaneous expression. Ancient or modern, permanent or transient, India's street art has evolved in a myriad of styles reflecting regional variation and concern. Barry Dawson's photographs offer both a colorful journey through India's cities, towns, and villages and a graphic celebration of its creative street culture. Here is an inspirational source of vibrant ideas for students, artists, and designers, as well as a vivid memory for anyone who has ever visited India.

      Street Graphics India
    • 1995

      Traditional Indonesian Textiles

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      The reverence accorded to textile art on the islands is reflected in every area of production; precision of weave and exquisite patterning are testimony to superlative craftsmanship. Lying at the heart of a vast network of trading routes, Indonesia has absorbed a wealth of foreign influences that have spawned an eclectic culture uniquely mirrored in its textile art. Beautiful cloud shapes characteristic of Chinese painting reappear in Javanese batik, while Ming porcelain and Chinese embroideries have provided inspiration for many wonderful patterns. Indian symbols - the tree of life, the naga snake, the sacred mountain, the lotus - have all been rendered as textile motifs. Geometric forms, human and animal figures and even Dutch Art Deco designs can also be found.

      Traditional Indonesian Textiles