Bali Museum
The Bali Museum is a museum of art and history located in Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia.
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Established | 1931 |
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Location | Denpasar |
Coordinates | 8°39′27″S 115°13′6.7″E |
Description
The museum was built in 1931 by architect P.J. Moojen, near the location of the former royal palace of Denpasar, which had been burnt to the ground during the Dutch intervention in Bali (1906), and used it as a model for its outside walls and courtyards.[1]
There are four main buildings inside the museum, Tabanan displaying theatrical masks and musical instruments, Karangasem sculptures and paintings, Buleleng textiles, and Timur with archeological finds.[1]
It is located on the east side of the central square of Denpasar, Taman Puputan.[1]
- Bronze Age ceremonial drum.
- Bronze Age spear.
- Statuette of Acintya.
gollark: Less physical contact is probably good disease-wise, though?
gollark: I think it's basically mostly airborne, but probably.
gollark: On the plus side, COVID-19 may cause the adoption of the obviously superior greeting of fistbumps to replace handshakes.
gollark: Few of the teachers here are very technologically competent.
gollark: This is pretty worrying for me since I'm doing my GCSEs in... a month and a half, now?
Notes
- Bali and Lombok, pp. 62–62.
References
- Bali and Lombok, Eyewitness Travel, Dorling Kindersley, London, 2007. ISBN 978-0-7566-2878-9.
Literature
- Lenzi, Iola (2004). Museums of Southeast Asia. Singapore: Archipelago Press. p. 200. ISBN 981-4068-96-9.
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