About the Author:
Thierry Mauger has been a radar instructor, computer field engineer, weapons system instructor, and ethnophotographer. He is a graduate of the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, a member of the Société des Gens de Lettres, and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. He is also active in the International Cooperation for the Preservation and Protection of Traditional Architectural Heritage (CICAT).
Well known to everyone interested in Saudi Arabia, he has traveled extensively in Asia and shared the life of the Arctic Inuit in 1985 before devoting himself to the tribes of Arabia. He is the author of several books, including In the Shadow of the Black Tents (Tihama, 1986), Bedouins of Arabia (Souffles, 1988), Flowered Men and Green Slopes of Arabia ( Souffles, 1988), The Ark of the Desert (Souffles, 1991), and Undiscovered Asir ( Stacey, 1993). He has also published a scholarly work on the image in the Arab world (EHESS, 1994) and a doctoral dissertation (social anthropology and ethnology) on the vernacular architecture of Asir (EHESS, 1995).
A ten-year stay in Saudi Arabia inspired Thierry Mauger to conduct a very extensive exploratory survey. After traveling across the country, he focused on Asir, one of the least known and most accessible parts of the globe. It is to the author's credit that he discovered and photographed the flowered men and the polychromatic frescoes in these remote territories.
From Library Journal:
The rugged mountains of southwest Saudi Arabia define an area with unique environmental and cultural features. Ethnophotographer Mauger (The Ark of the Desert, Routledge, 1991) twice has explored that Asir region, recording some of its most distinctive characteristics?striking domestic architecture distinguished both in form and by traditions of exuberant decoration expressed through ornamental stonework and brilliantly colored exterior and interior murals. The book is predominately a photo essay, with excellent color images of the often spectacular architectural decoration. The text, while providing useful background information, reveals the author's lack of expertise in art and architectural history and limited understanding of art vocabulary. Nevertheless, the book is highly recommended as a visual record of a little-known art tradition threatened with extinction because of modernization.?Eugene C. Burt, Art Inst. of Seattle Lib.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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