Lima, Peru | Saturday 05 July 2008 12:48 | | US$ - S/. 2.89
Musical group Choque Urbano presents "Fabricando Sonidos": a play about a factory where the workers produce sounds with the elements they use daily. The scenes occur on a day when one of the factory workers decides to transform himself into a "tin man". He and "The Captain" of the factory, a bitter man who only yells at his employees, battle it out at the end.
Artist Giuseppe Mendiola takes a complez look at Peru’s capital in “Urbe”, his fifth individual exhibition. This perspective shows Lima as a cloudless and chaotic city, Lima from the inside. This is not a stranger’s vision, or that of someone who knows Lima only by night, it’s the view of someone who has lived its changes, its smell, taste and sweat, the view of someone who has worn the city’s skin.
Giuseppe Campuzano presents his new book “Museo Travesti del Perú” (Transvestite Museum of Peru) and with it, transvestites of the past and present will transform the Centro Cultural de España into a living museum with various visual techniques. A performance festival, movies and conferences will also take place to tell the history of transvestites in Peru, from the pre-Incan times to the present day.
The 1st International Cajón Festival will be held the week of April 5 - 9 at Spain's Cultural Center in Lima. The cajón, a kind of box drum and an emblematic symbol of Peruvian music, is the instrument being honored during this five-day festival. Spain's Cultural Center will put on cajón concerts, classes and much more. For the festival's program, click here.
Lima, like other contemporary cities, finds itself in a constant state of change. The fragmented city, with its accelerated growth and disorder, its growing demographic (almost 9 million residents), its distinct landscapes, its constant transformation and its history, is the basis of the exhibition "Cuidad Muerta" (Dead City). The collective show features the works of artists José Ignacio Lora Iturburu, Miguel Ángel Alfaro, Rolando Sánchez Ponce, Albert García Gonzáles and Diana Trigueros Cisneros.
The Municipality of Lima, in co-production with the Mexican Embassy, has the privilege to present "Diego y Frida, una sonrisa a mitad del camino". The photography exhibit displays the matrimonial union of the two most recognized Mexican painters of the XX century, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo. Pieces by artists Guillermo Kahlo, Peter Jules, Guillermo Zamora and Juan Guzmán are featured, as well photographs by friends Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Nicholas Murria and Eduard Weston.
Giusseppe Mendiola presents his exhibit "Urbe" at the Galería Carré d’art. His works "aren't unknown visions and much less the perspective of someone who knows Lima only through nights as a bartender of this marvelous city, but instead it's a look of someone who has lived his ups and downs, his culture..."
The Galería Enlace Arte Contemporáneo presents, "Si no existe el más alla, la injusticia del pobre se prolonga enternamente" a photography exhibition by the MR group. The group, formed by Peruvian photographer Marina García Burgos, presents 16 color photographs that touch on themes of social injustice and racism in this country. The group "placed the victim of racism in the 'exclusive' space reserved for the racist."
San Isidro's Galeria Arte de Vertice is proud to present "No Fear: Estéticas del Reciclaje" (Recyclable Aesthetics) an art exhibit by Chiara Machiavello, Victor Castro and Harry Chavez.
Lika Mutal and Gam Klutier, outstading Dutch artists living in Peru, will present an exhibition of their best works as one of the cultural activities programmed for the EU-LAC Summit to be held in Peru. Lika Mutal’s "Pulso de la Montaña", is made up of twelve sculptures made in various types of stone. Gam Klutier will present “Señales de Luz” with large paintings in acrylic.
The British-Peruvian Cultural Center presents a two-part exhibition of Lajos d’Ébneth’s work, a Dutch-Hungarian artist who migrated to Peru in 1949. This versatile artist’s work shows complete mastery of various techniques. Much of his work is still preserved in Chaclacayo, where he designed his house under Bauhaus principles, while the rest of his pieces are in museums around the world.
The Gallery 80m² arte&debates in Barranco presents "Desapego", an exhibit by Roy Keitel. This is Keitel's second solo exhibition, who studied at the School of Art in Munich, Germany. Roy's works in this presentation take a look at the human condition in societies which are driven by a sense of detachment.
"Dos x Uno" (Two times One) is a fun show where certain things are questioned: your style, if you can buy happiness, if happiness comes in the form of a trip to miami or from yoga excercises. Jockey Plaza or the Dalai Lama, you decide. The production is directed by Rocio Tovar.
The Raul Porras Barrenechea gallery of the Centro Cultural Ricardo Palma presents "El invariable entusiasmo de Sísifo", an exhibition by Janine Soenens. The display includes pieces that are of medium scale, installations and videos. In Greek, "Sísifo" is the name of someone who angered the gods because of their extraordinary shrewdness. The gods punished them by giving them a task that represented vainness; they didn't believe there was a worse quality than that. This inspired the exhibition.
Peruvian artist Fernando Bedoya will present his latest exhibit at the Luis Miro Quesada Garland Gallery. The display will feature distinct aspects of his work of the last few years, as well as pieces he's done since 1985. Part of the exhibition will feature the piece titled "clase VE/Obra abierta", which was done in collaboration with Alfredo Marquez, Miguel Lescano, Marcel Velachaga and Guillermo Bolañas.
The Galería 80m2 de arte y debates presents "Lado B" (b-side), by Diego Molina, Eliana Otta, Hemilio Vargas and Juan Diego Vergara. The exhibition is a result of various group sessions of work. In the end, the work produced, like the b-side of a cassette, was not the group's "hits" but more of examples of the tests, enthusiasm and intuitions felt during the creation process. The works use cardboard and paper, and feature themes related to fashion, music and daily life in Lima.
San Isidro's Galería Índigo welcomes a photography exhibition by Mara Infantas. Her style varies and uses the values of light and shadow; the symbols of cultures and everyday day life. "Infantas considers photography an aesthetic that harmonizes well with the household, in that it uses simple and real elements from life, such as vegetables, fruits, liquors, etc. Photography can provoke emotions or sentiments. This is how this exhibition was born."
Toqapus were geometric designs that formed a square, which were thought to create a written system during the Inca culture. "Toqapu for me became a celebration commemorating 10 years of my relationship with jute and with 1000 kilometers of dyed and painted threads, caressed between my fingers." - Artist Pancho Basurco
16 Spanish artists will show us the uncertainty of urban landscapes, the unthinkable reconstruction of a physical space, the mystery of night, portraits of faces with closed eyes, and shadows that register the unimaginable. These images, which show us an aspect of contemporary Spanish photography, have been chosen because of their ability to evoke uncertainty. Before coming to Lima, this exhibition participated in the 2007 International Photographic Summit in Bogota.
Artists Julia Ortiz Elías and Julia Salinas Sánchez present an exhibition through installation, dolls and accessories, that will question the prejudices about women’s identities. The project is centered on the promotion of a product: a doll, every little girl’s toy, and all the accessories that come with it. In this way, they take a look at the different roles that women can play in Lima’s society, showing them in different stages of their lives.
In this exhibition, Diego Gianella’s intention is to look at engraving from an unconventional perspective, relating it to binding, installations, literature and alternative printing techniques. The exhibition will be centered around the presentation of the artistic book “Nostalgias Imperiales”, which won the first book contest organized by the literature magazine Dedo Critico, the Centro Cultural de España and the NGO Runa.
ICPNA has been holding the “Salón Nacional de Grabado” contest since 1966, one of the most important engraving competitions in our country. This year’s winners and participants will exhibit their artwork in ICPNA’s Juan Pardo Heeren Gallery. The first prize went unanimously to 23-year-old Luis Antonio Torres Villar of Huancayo, who won with two xylographies where he pays homage to the people of his community.
Brisas del Titicaca presents a spectacular show filled with traditional choreographies performed by professional and experienced dancers, accompanied by live music. A variety of typical Peruvian dishes are available, and the public can also join in dancing between performances.
The National Cultural Institute presents an exhibit in honor of Hilario Mendivil, a symbol of traditional Andean imagery, 30 years after his death. This artist's work is held as one of the country's most representative private collections. Hilario is considered to be one of the most important artists of his city, Cuzco, as his work encapsulates the religious spirit and richness found in the temples of this city. His ability to merge the Andean and Spanish tendencies is remarkable and as long as one of his descendants lives his art will continue evolving with each generation.