Aracari has been offering discerning guests tailormade trips to Peru for over 20 years. Now, Aracari’s founder, Marisol Mosquera, is opening up her little black book of treasured contacts to launch a new Peru Private Homes Collection. Departures Magazine featured Aracari's Private Homes Collection in their Travel News: Trips to Book in June round up! From your base in Lima, Cusco or the Sacred Valley, Aracari offers unrivalled access to local life, stepping foot in the homes of some of Peru’s most revered artists, long-standing families and private architectural gems. Peru Private Homes: Lima and surrounds Known for its culinary hot spots and colonial charm, Lima is an ever-evolving hub of Latin American creativity. Now Aracari’s guests can further their insight into this buzzing metropolis via access to the city’s most iconic mansions, sought-after personal art collections and the country’s most celebrated winery. Some key highlights include: Casa Aliaga Reportedly the oldest home on the continent, Casa Aliaga dates back to 1527 and has been lived in by the same family for 17 generations. Exemplifying life in the period of Viceroyalty and home to a chapel whose dome is said to be the oldest in Peru, a special tour of the house will offer unrivalled insight into Lima’s history. >Read more here. Casa García Alvardo Across town, Casa García Alvardo is one of few remaining examples of Republican architecture. Inhabited by the family who built the house in 1912, guests will be hosted for a tour and three-course lunch by Ms. Ana Maria de Astudillo or her daughter. >Read more here. Home of Augusta Barreda For art-lovers, Aracari can exclusively introduce guests to Augusta Barreda, a contemporary Peruvian artist and collector known for transforming bronze and wood into ethereal works. Guests will be granted access to her sea-facing Lima home, her private
Aracari has been offering discerning guests tailormade trips to Peru for over 20 years. Now, Aracari’s founder, Marisol Mosquera, is opening up her little black book of treasured contacts to launch a new Peru Private Homes Collection. Departures Magazine featured Aracari’s Private Homes Collection in their Travel News: Trips to Book…
The best guiding in Lima is with a local friend Despite all of the guidebooks and web resources out there, there is nothing that comes quite as close as having a friend in the city you're visiting, to see and experience a new place with someone who can show you 'their' city from a local's perspective. Whilst a tour guide might have all the textbook facts, Aracari also has a handpicked selection of 'friends in the city' who can give you this home-away-from-home insider experience. From their insight on Lima, to sharing their favorite hidden local hangouts, restaurants and boutiques, our 'friends in the city' can provide you with a genuine introduction to the places you visit for an alternative city tour. Our friends are also able to accompany you around town if you're looking to do something particular that doesn't need a formal tour guide (we've had guests on a mission to source textiles, lute instruments or just relax with their kids without a pre-planned schedule!), for the ultimate flexible approach to visiting Lima. So that's the concept behind Aracari's 'friend in the city' service, carefully matching guests with interesting people in Lima who are passionate about sharing their city with visitors, providing the best guiding in Lima, with an alternative twist. I met up with Carlos de la Torre, one of Aracari's 'friends' to chat about life in Lima, the way the city has changed, his favorite spots around town, and what it's like to accompany Aracari guests on a day out exploring Lima. Carlos de la Torre - your local friend in Lima I met Carlos at Arabica Espresso Bar - a popular local coffee shop in Miraflores. He's surprised to hear I've never been before, as he rates it as one of the best places in the city to grab a brew. I made a
The best guiding in Lima is with a local friend Despite all of the guidebooks and web resources out there, there is nothing that comes quite as close as having a friend in the city you’re visiting, to see and experience a new place with someone who can show you ‘their’ city…
First opened in August of 1964, the Amano Museum, now known as the Pre-Columbian Textile Museum, recently went through a years’ worth of renovations and reopened at the end of May 2015. After 50 years promoting and conserving Peru’s textile heritage, the remodeled museum in Peru's capital, Lima, doubled the exhibit space and improved conservation methods in anticipation of a large amount of visitors in the future. The permanent exhibit includes an impressive collection amassed by Amano including over 600 ancient textiles as well as ceramics from Pre-Inca cultures. Amano Museum Showcases Pre-Columbian Textile The concept of the museum started as a passion of Yoshitaro Amano, a Japanese businessman who relocated to Peru. Through his travels around the country he began to collect and preserve textiles that had been left to the elements without recognition of their true value. Originally part of his private collection in his Miraflores home, he soon started a foundation which became a renowned institution among scholars in Peru, Japan and beyond for Amano’s dedication to protection and preservation of Peruvian cultural and history. The Textile Exhibits The exhibit starts upstairs with an explanation of the emergence of textiles in different parts of the world and the first raw materials used. A large world map pinpoints the locations and raw materials native to each area of the world. The history of textiles in Peru covers the development of the Chavín, Paracas, Nasca, Moche, Huari, Sihuas, Lambayeque, Chimú, Chancay, Chuquibamba, and Inca cultures. The museum exhibits more than 120 textile works representing the long history of cultural development in pre-Columbian Peru, in addition to a room with display cases showing the various tools and raw materials required for the textile production that was explained in the first few rooms, such as dyeing, spinning, knotting, looping, and use
First opened in August of 1964, the Amano Museum, now known as the Pre-Columbian Textile Museum, recently went through a years’ worth of renovations and reopened at the end of May 2015. After 50 years promoting and conserving Peru’s textile heritage, the remodeled museum in Peru’s capital, Lima, doubled the…