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Mi trabajo como periodista especializado en recorrer el Perú, y con ojo ingenuo descubrir matices por mil en aquellos territorios donde se sintetizan la naturaleza, la historia y la cultura viva –territorios que podrían ser la principal fuente de riqueza y desarrollo para nuestro país, mediante adecuadas puestas en valor- ese trabajo me lleva a una conclusión paradójica.
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My work as a journalist specialized in traveling throughout Peru, and with a candid eye discovering nuances by the thousand in those regions that blend nature, history and living culture – regions that could be the main source of wealth and development for our country, given adequate restoration –this work leads me to a paradoxical conclusion. I’ve seen so very much in thirteen years of traveling professionally, to this place and that, however, I find that I have come to know an area the size of an ocean, but barely a millimeter in depth.
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The archaeological site of Numancia, a 2010 Watch site, recently overcame a siege of urban development proposals, with the threat of construction of a new 120-hectare industrial park and 50-meter-high concrete towers.
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In early 2013, Etienne Telemaque, a Haitian architect and urban planner living in New York, approached WMF to help with an exhibit and lecture about Haitian architecture he was planning at the Queens Museum of Art.
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While studying art in Paris in 1906, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney met an expatriate artist very much like herself—Robert Winthrop Chanler. They were both aristocrats, born and bred into New York high society at a time when their every movement, social interaction, and correspondence was carefully scrutinized in magazines and newspapers. Both were fleeing that life, finding solace in the Paris art scene and the bohemians who orbited it.
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Demographic changes across the globe indicate that we are living in an “Urban Century.” It is estimated that by 2020, 60% of the world population will live in cities. According to the latest census, 89% of Argentina’s population lives in urban areas. While it may seem insurmountable to stop the rapid development of cities, their histories do not have to be destroyed in the process.
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June 04, 2013

Stowe’s Lions Restored

Cheere worked in a variety of materials, but his larger garden statues were lead: cast, tooled, and painted to imitate stone. Amongst the grandest were a pair of lions at Stowe House, the guardians of its magnificent south front.
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My relationship with Nalatale Ruins started in 2010 while I was on a return trip to the country of my birth. As the old saying goes: you don’t realise what you’ve got until it’s gone, or in this case I didn’t realise the fantastic places I could visit until they were no longer easy to visit! And so I found myself wanting to visit as many of the important historic and cultural sites that I could whenever I returned to Zimbabwe, sites I had neglected to visit when I lived in the country.
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