An Exhibtion of Buckminster Fuller’s Balinese Art Collection
Please join us in the Fuller Dome on Thursday, March 31st, 2022 at 7PM for an opening reception of “Bucky in Bali” - an art exhibition of Buckminster Fuller’s Balinese “Young Artist Movement” art collection.
Famed inventor and futurist, Buckminster Fuller was known for spending much of his time traveling around the globe giving lectures, inspiring young people and leading projects. He had been just about everywhere in his 87 years, of nearly perpetual travel, but the Indonesian island of Bali held a special place for him. On his extended trips to Bali, Bucky fell in love with the island-people’s culture and he became one of the leading collectors of Balinese artwork known as the “Young Artist Movement.” Bucky is often referenced as an important collector in current articles on the history of the Balinese “Young Artist Movement.” The Bali cultural history website, ubudnowandthen.com noted that, “The art of the Young Artists was mostly bought by expatriates and visiting foreigners who loved them. Each room of Bali’s very first five-star hotel, The Bali Beach Hotel in Sanur, was decorated with a Young Artist painting. Famous visitors to Bali, such as the famous science visionary Buckminster Fuller and renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead made collections of their work.”
Bucky’s Balinese art collection and his exceptional appreciation of Balinese cultural history grew out of his speculation that the ancient people of the Indonesian islands “were the original, planet-landed peoples.” In his 1981 book “Critical Path” Bucky writes, “we note that the island people were the original, planet-landed peoples who explored widely with their paddled canoes and gradually settled inland and upland, being able to cope with the mountain coldness because of their new animal-skin clothing and tents fashioned from the skins of wild animals that roamed into their peninsula-interbridged "islands" during the last ice age.” In “Critical Path” Fuller also uses a prominent Balinese architectural feature to support this thesis, ”the great architectural feature of Bali is that of the narrow vertical gap in the gateways of their walled-in dwelling compounds, a gap they explain as representing the gap that occurred long ago between once-united Bali and Java. This occurred only 30,000 years ago, when the last ice age began to melt away and its waters once again separated the islands. The Balinese architectural legend-supported memory thus goes back 30,000 years.”
Bucky’s important collection of Balinese “Young Artist Movement” paintings grew so large that he had no more wall space left to hang the paintings and the collection spent decades in storage. In 2020 Bucky’s daughter Allegra Fuller Snyder donated the collection to the Center for Spirituality and Sustainability for exhibition in the Fuller Dome Gallery. The world will now get to see this important collection in the Fuller Dome Gallery on the year’s 90th Day (3/31/22) on the planet’s 90th Meridian for an opening reception at 7:00 pm. for more information please call (618) 650-3246 or email fullerdome@outlook.com