Allen S. Weissis the author and editor of over forty books in the fields of performance theory, landscape architecture, gastronomy, sound art, experimental theater, and ceramics. He has written extensively on Japanese culture, includingZen Landscapes: Perspectives on Japanese Gardens and Ceramics(Reaktion Books) and The Grain of the Clay: Reflections on Ceramics and the Art of Collecting(Reaktion Books), as well asLe got de Kyoto(Mercure de France) andGuide anachronique de Kyoto(ditions Arlea). He has been the recipient of Fulbright, Japan Society, and tant donne grants, and is Distinguished Teacher in the departments of Performance Studies and Cinema Studies in the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University.
"Reviews of the French edition ""This work, which deals with the place of handicrafts (the importance of potters as artists) in museums, tableware in restaurants, and the symbolism of bells, is an indispensable cultural [handbook] for immersing oneself in all that Kyoto can exude in its beauty and truth. Remarkable! —Parenthèse “It is only in a next step that a reader, after having fulfilled his tourist duties and visited all the places 'to see,' will deepen his journey and knowledge of Japanese aesthetics through this work, which is full of subtle analyses and information on concepts familiar to Japanologists and more especially to all those who think about the confrontations between the perception of art and beauty, in the West and the East.” —René de Ceccatty, in Les Lettres francaises “Memorable and exalting . . . Allen S. Weiss is at the same time guide and master, like Virgil at the side of Dante during their trip through Hell and Purgatory.” —Lucien d’ Azay, in Revue des Deux Mondes Reviews of other works by Allen S. Weiss “This is a brilliant, almost hallucinatory, revelation of landscape architecture--its profoundly metaphysical origins, its transfixing history, and its virtually infinitizing future. . . . Weiss has raised our understanding of the garden to an exponentially higher level.” —Professor David B. Allison, State University of New York at Stony Brook, in praise of Unnatural Horizons “Weiss himself is a genuine aficionado. He writes with knowledge and enthusiasm about many aspects of Japanese aesthetics.” —Crafts magazine, in praise of The Grain of the Clay: Reflections on Ceramics and the Art of Collecting “The first in-depth Western study that looks at the relationship that exists between gardens and ceramics, suggesting new theories of representation and, above all, presenting ideas that may change the way we view such places.” —The Japan Times, in praise of Zen Landscapes: Perspectives on Japanese Gardens and Ceramics"