Before you arrive
Set deep in the lush Gianyar foothills, amid tumbling ravines and rippling rice fields, Ubud’s inland setting is both its charm and saving grace. The city’s location has meant that it skipped a lot of the rapid 20th-century growth that befell Bali’s southern coast, letting it develop at a slower pace.
In many ways it’s a work of art. What were once a handful of artisan villages, home to wood-carvers, textile makers and painters, merged over time. By the 1930s, European artists flocked here, drawn by its creative spirit, building the city’s first galleries and confirming it as Bali’s cultural heartland.
But the old skills were not forgotten. Even now, some neighbourhoods and villages are still better known for their specialist crafts. Pay a visit to Mas,…
