UBUD
TOUR
On the
Gallery and Temple Circuit
There
are so many ways to spend your day in Ubud - visiting
galleries and artists' studios, sipping drinks in garden
cafes and enjoying long strolls through the countryside.
Here are just a few of the "must sees."
The
Ubud highlights
No
visit to Ubud is complete without a visit to the Puri
Saren palace at the main crossroads, with its maze of
family compounds and richly carved doorways by Lempad.
The royal family temple, Pura Pamerajaan Sari Cokorda
Agung, is next door a storage place for the family pusaka
(regalia).
To
the west behind a lotus pond by the Puri Saraswati palace
(now a hotel), lies the superbly chiseled Pura Saraswati
temple of learning a clin d'oeil dedicated to Ubud's artistic
past. From the crossroads here, walk north to Ubud's "navel"
temple, Pura Puseh, with its delightful sculptures.
Next
stop is the Puri Lukisan Museum to enjoy the paintings
and sculptures and the peaceful garden. The museum was
founded in 1953 by surviving members of Ubud's famed Pita
Maha movement. Painted panels that Lempad executed 40
years ago depict the Balinese agrarian cycle.
There
are numerous studios and shops in the center of town.
Painter Han Snel has his up behind the Pura Saraswati.
If it's lunchtime, pop into the Cafe Lotus for a fresh
fettuccine and a chocolate cake. For some of the best
coffee in Bali, stop by Angkasa, north of the village
hall on JI. Suweta, or Tut Mak Warung Kopi, south of the
soccer field on Jl. Dewi Sita.
Ubud
has many museums, including Seniwati Gallery, which features
women's art, on the main road east of the market. Suteja
Neka, whose father was a painter, is the foremost dealer
and collector on Bali founder also of the Neka Museum.
The most famous artist of Ubud however was Lempad. His
son, Made Semung, now runs the Lempad Gallery - ask him
to show you some of the master's delicate erotic pen and
ink drawings.
Mischievous
monkeys
Another
of the major "sights" of Ubud is the so-called
Monkey Forest Temple, 2 km to the south. Stroll down Monkey
Forest Road to have a look at all the new shops and restaurants.
Before entering the temple itself, however, keep all edibles,
eyeglasses, earrings, etc., and hold on tight to your
bags. These rapacious thieves are dangerous if provoked.
The Pura Dalem Agung Padangtegal itself is an extraordinary
"temple for the dead," with a covered gate or
candi kurung. For further explorations from here.
Having
gone east and south, now travel west along the main road
across the bridge to Campuan. Up to the left is eccentric
Filipino American painter Antonio Blanco's, gallery of
extravagant nudes and anecdotes. Farther up on the right
is the Neka Museum housing the best collection of paintings
on the island. For more contemporary art, visit the Sika
Art Gallery in Sangginan, near the Neka Museum, and the
Komaneka Gallery, halfway down JI. Monkey Forest.