Autrefois, Maison Privée

Photographs by Bill Burke

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ISBN: 9781576871805

Photographs by Bill Burke
Essay by Bernard Fall
Text by Prince Sirik Matak

Architecture / Photography / Asian Studies
Clothbound
14.5 x 11.25 inches
184 pages
98 quadratone photographs
ISBN: 978-1-57687-180-5
Photographs by Bill Burke
Essay by Bernard Fall
Text by Prince Sirik Matak

Architecture / Photography / Asian Studies
Clothbound
14.5 x 11.25 inches
184 pages
98 quadratone photographs
ISBN: 978-1-57687-180-5

Meaning “once a private house,” the title Autrefois, Maison Privée refers to the prevalent reappropriation of once private houses for municipal and government use. In his book, Bill Burke captures the dramatic history of Indochina from the influence of French colonialism, through the rise of communism and the devastating effects of the Vietnam War, and to the repopulation of Cambodia after the fall of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge and the opening of the area to capitalism. Autrefois, Maison Privée is the only book to delineate this transformation. Featuring Burke’s signature gritty layout and design, Autrefois, Maison Privée is a marvel livre deluxe of history, architecture, and photography.

Photographer Bill Burke has taken annual trips to Indochina ever since he first traveled to Asia in 1982. Although he usually photographed the people, Burke became aware of how the architecture absorbed as much as reflected the region’s history. Transfixed by buildings like the municipal offices built by the French in the 1860s, the vaulted railroad stations and post offices of the 1930s, and the art deco fantasy cinemas of the 1960s, Burke saw the region as an architectural museum, rotting in the humidity and untouched by economic ambition, and began to trace the cultural changes in the area through its architecture.

Burke’s first entrée into Indochina occurred during the period of Soviet control, a period of recovery that allowed for the current explosion of capitalism, which has already begun to devastate an architectural heritage that was well preserved in the deep freeze of socialism. What the B-52s and tanks didn’t destroy during decades of war, developers from neighboring countries are busily replacing and defacing with their shrines of commerce.

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