He watched the buildings and empty streets of São Paulo, bothered by insistent noise from a construction site on Avenida Angélica. For a whole morning he was thinking about the number of windows that looked into the distance and the stories that lay behind each.
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In 1941, Walt Disney and his studio of several artists toured Latin America for two and a half weeks in a trip paid for by the United States Government that inspired them to create classics like “Peter Pan” and “Alice in Wonderland.”
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For Alejandro Fernández Almendras it has never been easy to finance his films, but that may change after his new film.
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“Chunche” is a word in the Costa Rican lexicon that means “whatchamacallit.” For his exhibit, “Chunches,” Guatemalan multimedia artist Benvenuto Chavajay used the term playfully, but his installations are not “cute.”
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The four day event was described as an exploration into “visionary art and Andean cosmovisions… in order to exchange knowledge, share experiences, [and] reflect.” Numerous artists, researchers, and professionals planned to help guide visitors, and discuss the main themes of visionary art and sustainability.
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Recently, folk musician Raúl Carnota passed away after an illness and guitarist Carlos García López died in a traffic accident.
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Behemoth Dreadnoughtus, discovered in Santa Cruz, may shed light on the biggest class of dinosaurs.
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The International Music Festival of the Heights was organized to raise awareness for the respect and care for mountains, as a prelude to COP20, world summit climate change.
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When the artist Fausto Pacheco was born in Heredia in 1899, Costa Rica was a very different place. San José was only the size of a large town, and the avenues were lined with streetcars.
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Archaeologists have found two ancient Mayan cities in southeastern Mexico, and the lead researcher says he believes there are “dozens” more to be found in the region.
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