The itinerary that was made for us to include all of the areas that we wanted to visit was excellent, you did a great job in fitting a lot into a 3 week period....... There was no one stand out highlight of our trip as we enjoyed every place we visited and they were all individually exciting and quite different. If we had to pick one it would be a toss up between Easter Island and Machu Picchu. Thank you for all of the organization that went into our trip, we did not have to worry about any aspect other than to turn up at the allotted time and someone would look after every detail for us.
Many Thanks
With the recent award of a Nobel Prize to Mario Vargas Llosa, a Peruvian writer, the arts and culture of Peru are now getting more attention than ever. If you are going for a vacation in Peru, there's never been a better time to impress the locals with your knowledge of Peru’s modern culture, so here are 4 of Peru’s more well-known photographers, writers and painters to get the conversation flowing.
The celebrity portrait photographer
A famous Peruvian fashion photographer is Mario Testino, who was born
in 1954. Testino has done a great variety of photography including fashion
narratives for Vogue, Gucci and Vanity Fair as well as celebrity shots
of such people as Diana Princess of Wales along with her sons; actresses
including Julia Roberts, Meg Ryan, Cameron Diaz and Gwyneth Platrow; models
such as Elizabeth Hurley and Kate Moss and performers including Madonna,
Lady Gaga and Janet Jackson. Since 1982, Testino has been living in London
and frequently photographs the British Royal Family in addition to his
work being exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery in London as well
as in many galleries and museums around the world. Most recently his work
is being shown in London at the Phillips de Pury & Co auction house.
The indigenous photographer
Considered the only major indigenous Latin America photographer of his
time, Martín Chambi Jiménez lived from 1891 until 1973.
His photographs were prolific and covered the towns and countryside of
the Peruvian Andes revealing their social complexity and giving his photographs
profound historic and ethnic documentary value. He photographed almost
anything from weddings and fiestas to the poverty of the poor along with
the public events shared by both. He was a major portrait photographer
in Cusco as well as a photographer of many Peruvian landscapes which he
sold primarily as postcards, a format he pioneered in Peru. The New York
Museum of Modern Art held a retrospective of his work in 1979 and it later
traveled to other locations around the world and inspired more international
exhibitions of his work.
The Nobel Prize winning author
Born in 1936, Jorge Mario Pedro Vargas Llosa, recent winner of the Nobel
Prize for literature, is a Peruvian writer, journalist, essayist and politician.
He is one of the leading authors of his generation and one of Latin America’s
most significant novelists and essayists. He gained international recognition
as a writer in the 1960s with his novels such as “The Time of the
Hero”, “The Green House” and “Conversation in
the Cathedral”. He not only writes novels but across other literary
genres such as journalism and literary criticism. Themes for his novels
include comedies, murder mysteries, political thriller and historical
novels. Several of his novels have also been made into feature films.
The painter famous for "pin-up" ladies
Famous for his paintings of pin-up girls is Alberto Vargas who lived from
1896 until 1982. He was born in Arequipa, Peru but moved to the United
States in 1916, after studying art in Europe before the First World War.
Early in his career he worked as an artist for the Ziegfeld Follies as
well as many Hollywood studios. His fame as an artist of pin-up girls
came during the Second World War when his pictures for Esquire magazine
became known as the “Varga Girls”. Many World War II aircraft
adapted their nose art from those Esquire pin-ups. The “Varga Girls”
reappeared in Playboy magazine in the 1960s, leading to a flourishing
career with major exhibitions all over the world. Vargas painted mostly
with watercolor and airbrush and is considered as one of the finest artists
in his genre.
You're ready! Get out there and let your Peruvian hosts know about your appreciation for their culture. Mario Vargas Llosa's Nobel Prize has created a huge amount of national pride, and your knowledge is bound to make you a few foreign friends.
Author: Jon Clarke - Escaped to Peru / Escaped to Latin America