Follow Anne on Pinterest

Les Femmes

Self Love Is Saying ‘No’ to Fashion Body Images You Hate

Michelle Williams US Vogue Interview & Photos As Marilyn Monroe

Madonna & Andrea Roseborough | Tom Munro | Harper’s Bazaar US December 2011

Kate Winslet | Tom Munro | Harper’s Bazaar UK November 2011 | ‘Forever Chic’

Ines de la Fressange | 53, French Chic & Divinely Delicious

Emmanuelle Alt & Nudity | Will Vogue Paris Remain A Sensual Beacon?

Clarissa & Doug | Tom Ford & Carine Roitfeld | Vogue Paris December 2010-January 2011

Ines de la Fressange: A gorgeous French materpiece

Selita Ebanks | Kanye West | ‘Runaway’ Full Video Embedded

Christina Hendricks Reveals Our Inner Lilith Woman

Martha Stewart’s Fashion Model Days

Reflections on Female Sexual Desire: Anais Nin, Marilyn Monroe & Isabelle Allende Join Forces with Anne

Zaha Hadid: Master Builder | Ancient Female Vision

Stella McCartney’s Love of Land, Family & Design Sustainability

Style Books

Life & Style Media

Black Book Magazine
British Vogue
Cooking Channel TV
Dazed Digital
Dezeen
Dossier Journal
Gotham Magazine
Home & Design
Industrie Magazine/Nowmanifest.com
Interview Magazine
Liqurious
Metropolis Magazine
New York Magazine
NYTimes Home & Garden
NOWNESS
Ode Magazine
On Earth
Organic Authority
STYLE
Taste Spotting
TheOnes2Watch
Travel + Leisure
Vanity Fair
Vogue.com
Vogue Paris
Vogue Italia
W Magazine
Wallpaper
Wine Spectator
WSJ Life, Culture, Magazine
Yatzer - Design To Share

Informed

Academic Earth Lectures
Al Jazeera English
Ahram Online
AlterNet
American Thinker
BBC
Bloomberg
City Journal
CNN Politics
Commentary
EcoSalon
Economist
Financial Times
Foreign Affairs
Foreign Policy
France 24
Good
Grist
Guardian UK
Harvard Magazine
Los Angeles Times
More Intelligent Life
Mother Jones
NPR Arts & Life
National Geographic
National Review
New York Times
New York Review of Books
Orion
Pew Research Center Online NewsHour|PBS
Politico
Psychology Today
Public Broadcasting System
Reason Magazine
Scientific American
Skeptic
Slate Magazine
Sydney Morning Herald
Telegraph UK
The Atlantic Magazine
The Christian Science Monitor
The Daily Beast
The Daily Green
The Hindu
The Huffington Post
The Nation
The National UAE
The New Republic
The New York Times
The New Yorker
The Root
The Times of India
Utne Reader
Vanity Fair
Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
Washington Times
World Changing
Whole Living
Xinhuanet
Yes Magazine

Style Books

 

« Pros & Amateur Artists Use Brushes App for iPhone | Main | Li Xiaofeng's Ceramic Goddess Worship Goes Lacoste Manly »
Sunday
Jul042010

Splendor in Siem Reap and Angkor Wat

Reflection pool at Oriental Hotel in Bangkok via Tex Flix on Flickr

As a design person, I was amazed at the refined aesthetic of everyday people living in Southeast Asia. I remember returning to the Oriental Hotel in Bangkok one evening.

Entering my room, I found my long, silk gown draped across the bed, waiting for me. My surprise came in the bathroom, however.

Late for dinner, I had tossed my hairbow askew somewhere; the same for my necklace and earrings. Truthfully, there was a lot of stuff around one woman’s face in those years.

Precious Attention to Detail

The maid made art of my belongs. She clasped the necklace, placing it on a linen towel, then put the earrings inside, perfectly centered. My hairbow rested upright, near the clasp, completing this jewelry art collage.  I was so impressed that a maid would create beauty from my belongings.

This attention to precious detail and presentation is central to Asian and Oriental cultures.

This breathtaking photo of Cambodia’s Siem Reap pull my heart and memories back to Southeast Asia. I’ve not visited Angkor Wat. It lives as a focus point on my To Do list … along with Vietnam.

Reuters takes us on the crunch “48 hours in Siem Reap” tour.  Read and enjoy. I moved on to You Tube, wanting to capture the sensual intricacy of the temples. I need a contemplative moment in my totally frazzled state. No tuk-tuk rides or market scenes for me. I need a totally peaceful moment, reveling in the extraordinary beauty and intricate carvings of the Cambodian Temples.

According to Sacred Temples.com,  there are two great complexes of ancient temples in Southeast Asia, one at Bagan in Burma, the other at Angkor in Cambodia. The temples of Angkor, built by the Khmer civilization between 802 and 1220 AD, represent one of humankind’s most astonishing and enduring architectural achievements. From Angkor the Khmer kings ruled over a vast domain that reached from Vietnam to China to the Bay of Bengal. The structures one sees at Angkor today, more than 100 stone temples in all, are the surviving remains of a grand religious, social and administrative metropolis whose other buildings - palaces, public buildings, and houses - were built of wood and are long since decayed and gone.

Apsaras are an embodiment of the ideal female beauty in Cambodian culture. Both modern and ancient Khmer artists rendered them elaborately and with great emotional intensity.The organic, fecund nature of this architecture is so female. Not pyramids pointing to the heavens, these temples and carvings are pregnant with sensuality and female spirit. These temples do not worship kings, but nature herself. The surfaces do not immediately reveal their entire detail. Like a mysterious woman, they require diligent study and investigation. I can imagine these walls revealing new surprises, with every visit.

 

I wonder how many hands have caressed these sacred walls. Thousands? Millions? 

Watching this Siem Reap video, I’m spellbound over their gorgeous essence. I hope you enjoy them, too. I must run … back to work … a big project launching any day. I miss you, but my life is not my own this minute.

These great walls speak to me, reminding me that nurturing spirits is not a part-time job. One either commits or gets out of the garden.  I’ll do better this week.

Love,
Anne 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>