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Latin
Culture |
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Peru's
Culture
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Culture
Art
Literature
Architecture
Music
Dance
Cuisine |
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The Culture of Peru
was shaped by the relationship between Hispanic and Amerindian
cultures. The ethnic diversity of Peru allowed diverse traditions
and customs to coexist. Peru has passed through various
intellectual stages - from colonial Hispanic culture to European
Romanticism after independence. The early 20th century brought “indigenismo”,
expressed in a new awareness of Indian culture. Since World War
II, Peruvian writers, artists, and intellectuals such as César
Vallejo and José María Arguedas have participated in worldwide
intellectual and artistic movements.
Main article: Peruvian arts |

Gold Moche Headdress - Feline. 400 A.D. Larco Museum
Collection. |
During pre-Columbian times, Peru was one of the major centers
of artistic expression in The Americas, where Pre-Inca
cultures, such as Chavín, Moche, Paracas, Huari (Wari), Nazca,
Chimu, and Tiahuanaco developed high-quality pottery,
textiles, jewelry, and sculpture.
Drawing upon earlier cultures, the Incas continued to maintain
these crafts but made even more impressive achievements in
architecture. |
The mountain
town of Machu Picchu and the buildings at Cuzco are excellent
examples of Inca architectural design.
During the colonial period, Spanish baroque fused with the rich
Inca tradition to produce mestizo or creole art. The Cuzco school
of largely anonymous Indian artists followed the Spanish baroque
tradition with influence from the Italian, Flemish, and French
schools. Painter Francisco Fierro made a distinctive contribution
to this school with his portrayals of typical events, manners, and
customs of mid-19th-century Peru. Francisco Lazo, forerunner of
the indigenous school of painters, also achieved fame for his
portraits.
In the decade after 1932, the “indigenous school” of painting
headed by Jose Sabogal dominated the cultural scene in Peru. A
subsequent reaction among Peruvian artists led to the beginning of
modern Peruvian painting. Sabogal’s resignation as director of the
National School of Arts in 1943 coincided with the return of
several Peruvian painters from Europe who revitalized
international styles of painting in Peru. During the 1960s,
Fernando de Szyszlo, an internationally recognized Peruvian
artist, became the main advocate for abstract painting and pushed
Peruvian art toward modernism. Peru remains an art-producing
center with painters such as Gerardo Chavez, Alberto Quintanilla,
and Jose Carlos Ramos, along with sculptor Victor Delfin, gaining
international stature. Young artists continue to develop now that
Peru’s economy allows more promotion of the arts.
The zampoña is a Peruvian wind instrument, mostly used by Andean
musiciansPre-Hispanic Peruvian Andean cultures were especially
bound to musical artistic expressions. In fact, almost all
agricultural communal works were accompanied by music and singings
(generically called in Quechua language: taki).
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Main article: Peruvian literature Peruvian literature has its roots in the oral traditions of
pre-Columbian civilizations. Spaniards introduced writing in the
16th century, and colonial literary expression included chronicles
and religious literature.
After independence, Costumbrism and
Romanticism became the most common literary genres, as exemplified
in the works of Ricardo Palma.[1] In the early 20th century, the
Indigenismo movement produced such writers as Ciro Alegría,[2]
José María Arguedas,[2] and César Vallejo. |
The
zampoña is a Peruvian wind instrument,
mostly used by Andean musicians
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| During the second
half of the century, Peruvian literature became more widely known
because of authors such as Mario Vargas Llosa, a leading member of
the Latin American Boom. |
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The Cathedral of Cusco.Main article: Architecture of Peru
Peruvian architecture is a conjunction of European styles
exposed to the influence of indigenous imagery. Two of the
most well-known examples of the Early Colonial period are the
Cathedral and the church of Santa Clara of Cuzco. |

Huacas del Sol y de la Luna located at 5 kilometers south from
Trujillo |
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After this period, the
mestization reached its richer expression in the Baroque. Some
examples of this Baroque period are the convent of San
Francisco de Lima, the church of the Compañía and the facade
of the University of Cuzco and, overall, the churches of San Agustín
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and Santa Rosa of Arequipa. The independence war left a creative emptiness
that was filled by the Neoclassicism of the French. The 20th
century was characterized by the eclectic architecture, which
has been in stark opposition to constructive functionalism. |

The Cathedral of Cusco. |
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Its most
considerable example is San Martin Plaza in Lima. |
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Main article: Music of Peru |
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A Peruvian sling made of alpaca hairThe Pre-Hispanic Andean
musicians mostly used wind instruments such as the quena, the
pinkillo, the erke, the antara or siku (also called zampoña), the
pututo or pototo, etc.
They also used diverse membranophone
instruments such as the tinya (hand drum), |
A
Peruvian sling made of alpaca hair
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the wankar, instrument
of big dimensions, the pomatinyas - made of puma skin-, and the
runatinyas - made of human skin. The runatinya was also used in
battle. |
With the Spanish conquest, new instruments arrived like harps,
guitars, vihuelas, bandurrias, lutes, etc. Because of the arrival
of these musical instruments, new hybrid Andean/European
instruments appeared. Some of these instruments are still used
today: the Andean harp and the charango. The sounding box of the
charango is made of the armadillo’s shell.
The cultural crossbreeding did not limit itself to the contact of
Indigenous and European cultures. The African slaves’ contribution
was demonstrated in rhythms and percussion instruments. This
influence is visible in musical forms like the festejo and the
zamacueca.
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Marinera Norteña, the most representative dance in Peru. |
Apart from dances of native origin, there are also dances that
are related to the agricultural work, hunting and war. Some
choreographies show certain Christian influence. Two of the
most representative Andean dances are the kashua and the wayno
or huayno. The kashua has a communal character and it is
usually danced in groups in the country or open spaces. |
The huayno is
a “salon ball”. It is danced in couples and in closed spaces. The
yaravi and the triste have also an Andean origin. They are usually
songs with very emotional lyrics.
Dances of ritual character are the achocallo, the pinkillada, the
llamerada (dance that imitates the llama’s walk), the kullawada
(the spinners' dance), etc. Between the Hunting dances, it can be
mentioned: the llipi-puli, gudi-dada and choq'elas. They are
dances from the altiplano related to the vicuña’s hunting.
There are some dances of war like the chiriguano which has an
Aymara origin, the chatripuli that satirizes the Spanish Realist
soldiers, and the kenakenas a dance about the Chilean soldiers who
occupied Peru during the War of the Pacific in 1879. There are
also Carnival Dances. A Carnival is a western holiday that, in the
Peruvian Andes, is celebrated simultaneously with the crops time.
Many rural communities celebrate the youths’ initiation during
these holidays with ancestral rites and dances.
The most internationally known dance in Peru is the Marinera
Norteña. This dance represents a man’s courting of a young woman.
There are local variants of this dance in Lima and the other
regions of the country. |
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Popular celebrations are the product of every town’s traditions
and legends. These celebrations gather music, dances, meals and
typical drinks. In addition to the religious celebrations like
Christmas, Corpus Christi or Holy Week, there are others that
express the syncretism of the indigenous beliefs with the
Christians’. An example of this kind of celebration is the
Alasitas (an Aymara word that, according to some, means “buy me”)
which combines a crafts and miniatures fair with dances, meals and
a mass.
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Main article: Peruvian cuisine
Peru has a varied
cuisine with ingredients like maize, tomato, potatoes, uchu or
Ají (Capsicum pubescens), oca, ulluco, avocado, fruits like
chirimoya, lúcuma and pineapple, and animals like taruca (Hippocamelus
antisensis), llama and guinea pig (called cuy). |

Ceviche, the most typical dish in Peru |
The combination of
American, European and Moorish culinary traditions, resulted in
new meals and ways of preparing them. The successive arrivals of
Africans and Chinese also influenced in the development of the
Creole cuisine.
Some typical Peruvian dishes are ceviche (fish and shellfish
marinated in citrus juice), the chupe de camarones (a soup made of
shrimp (Cryphiops caementarius)), anticuchos (cow's heart roasted
en brochette), the olluco con charqui (a casserole dish made of
ulluco and charqui), the Andean pachamanca (meats, tubers and
broad beans cooked in a stone oven), the lomo saltado (meat fried
lightly with tomato and onion, served with french fries and rice)
that has a Chinese influence, and the picante de cuy (a casserole
dish made of fried guinea pig with some spices). Peruvian food can
be accompanied by typical drinks like the chicha de jora (a chicha
made of tender corn dried by the sun). There are also chichas made
of purple corn or peanut. They are very refreshing and do not have
any alcoholic content. |
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