|
Tourist Guide |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
Before you go,
Safety Tips,
Events in Perú,
Flights and Airlines,
Currency, Taxes and Tipping,
Credit Cards and Traveler Checks,
Visas,
Prohibitions |
 |
| |
Embassies in Perú,
Health and Vaccines,
Medical Insurance,
Lodging,
Museums,
Shopping,
Night Life,
Tourist Protection Service,
Recommended,
Links | |
 |
 |
Worldwide Bookings
We are open 7 days a week
Sales Department: |
|
Visit Us: Portal Comercio 121
Main Square Cusco – Peru
E-mail:
info@perucusco.com
MSN:
perucusco@hotmail.com
Skype:
perucusco
Call us: 0051 84 25329 (Office)
Mobil 0051 84 9625171 (24 Hrs)
Included Sunday & Holidays
Schedule Work 09 Hrs 20 Hrs
|
| peru, culinary, peru foot,
peru gastromic, tours, peru, travel, peru, adventures,
peru hiking, peru, cooking, peru trips, peru, travel,
peru, tours, peru ecological, peru rainforest, peru,
mystical, peru vivencial, peru, flight tickets, peru,
train, peru bus, peru, trains, peru booking, peru,
hostels, peru, trips, peru, rainforest. |
|
|
People
& Culture (FOLKLORE) |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Peru boasts one of the largest varieties
of arts and crafts on Earth, as can be
seen from the growing network of
exporters who each year exhibit the
skill of Peruvian craftsmen in Europe,
Asia and North America. The diversity,
color, creativity and multiple functions
of Peru's folk art has made it a
fundamental activity not just for Peru's
cultural identity, but also as a way of
life for thousands of families and even
entire communities, such as Sarhua and
Quinua in Ayacucho.
Works of art, both big and small, spark
admiration amongst Peruvians and
foreigners alike, are steeped in
centuries of history, imbued with
pre-Hispanic shapes and symbols which
have merged with others brought over by
the Spaniards. Peru has forged a
multiple and complex identity which is
paradoxically one of the reasons why
Peruvian arts and crafts are tending to
shift towards naïf art, lending their
works a touch of innocence.
The excellence of Peruvian artisans can
be seen in the harmony of the geometric
designs in weavings, the minute
portraits of peasant farming life on the
carved gourds called mates burilados,
the cultural mestizaje or blend in the
colorful retablo boxed scenes. There are
also the finely carved Huamanga stone
sculptures, the complex Baroque nature
of the wooden carvings, the beauty of
gold and silver relics and the many
forms that pottery has shaped the clay
into pottery.
These works are just some of the
cultural manifestations of a people who
communicate mainly through art, using a
language whose fundamental aspects are
abundance, fertility and confidence in
the future.
TRADITIONAL DRESS
In Peru's rural areas, the way people
dress makes an important distinction, as
a result of the blend of pre-Hispanic
influences with the European clothing
that the natives were forced to wear
during the colonial era. The traditional
Inca anacu was transformed by the local
women into the brightly-colored and
multi-layered petticoats known as
polleras. Depending on the region, a
black skirt is decorated with a belt
which can come in a variety of colors
and is decorated with flowers in the
northern Piura highlands or a
brightly-hued woolen lliclla in
Chiclayo, further south.
In the highlands above Lima, the skirt
is decorated with red and black
embroidered edging, while in Junín, as
in Cajamarca and Cuzco, women no longer
use black skirts. Underneath their
skirts, the women use layers of
petticoats made from cotton which can be
embroidered with gold and silver
threads, featuring superbly-crafted
drawings along the edge.
The Peruvian poncho dates back to the
seventeenth century and apparently is a
variation on the unku used by men at the
time. The heavy ponchos used in
Cajamarca keep out the rain and are as
long as those used in Puno, where they
are died scarlet during festivals. In
Cuzco, ponchos are short and feature
elaborate geometric figures against a
red background.
On the coast, ponchos were used by the
plantation workers, and they were spun
from cotton or vicuña fiber. In the
jungle, both men and women from some
tribes wear the cushma, a loose tunic
stitched up on both sides and
embellished with dyes and geometric
figures typical of the region.
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|