Vamos Colombia Tour Blog

Vamos Colombia Tour Blog
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Sunday, May 15, 2011

Art galeries en Bogota

Enjoy this article by my friend Mark Chestnut on the Macarena neighborhood in Bogota.

La Macarena: Exploring Art Galleries and Restaurants in Bogota's Artsy, Bohemian Heart

Artistic Bent: La Macarena district in Bogota is a hub for art and creativity.

BY MARK CHESNUT


Decades ago, the hilly neighborhood called La Macarena was one of Bogota's most upscale places to live. It later become less than desirable, but in recent years has been reborn as one of the city's hottest up-and-coming magnets for lovers of art and cuisine.


I spent a couple enjoyable afternoons in La Macarena during my recent visit to Bogota, wandering the shady, peaceful streets and peeking into the growing number of art galleries. Here are a few top choices for browsing and dining in La Macarena.


Art Galleries


Alonso Garcés is the oldest art gallery in Bogota's La Macarena district.


Alonso Garcés Galería, Carrera 5 #26-92, La Macarena. Tel. +57-1-337-5827. The largest and oldest of the galleries in La Macarena, Alonso Garcés opened in 1977 in an abandoned church. The current exhibit features the a video work by Colombian artist Clemencia Echeverri. www.alonsogarcesgaleria.com


Galería Mü is billed as Bogota's first gallery dedicated solely to photography.


, Carrera 4A #26-29, L. 202, Casona de San Miguel, Tel. +57-1-282-0496. Opened in February 2011 and billed as the city’s first gallery to focus solely on photography, Mü is owned by a U.S. expat and his Colombian wife. An interesting variety of work fills the walls here, and through June 11, the gallery is hosting the work of six emerging photographers during FotoFest 300. www.galeriamu.com


Mundo, Carrera 5 #26A-19, Torres del Parque, La Macarena. Tel. +57-1-232-2408. This art gallery, which has its own magazine, is also participating in the FotoFest 300 photography exhibition through June 11. www.galeria-mundo.com


Valenzuela Klenner Galería, Carrera 5 #26-28. Tel. +57-1-243-7752. This multilevel venue has contemporary exhibits that tend toward political and social statements. Recent exhibitions include Unlikely Savages, which features the work of seven artists who "question the continuity of the savage paradigm in relation to Latin America and the ideologies of dominion and violence that support it." http://vkgaleria.com/


Shopping


Kolectivo, Carrera 4A #26-30, La Macarena. This small shop mostly stocks women's clothes, but also has items like messenger bags, wallets and cell phone cases, all made from recycled newpapers and magazines. If you're looking for a bag whimsically decorated with an image of the award-winning Trans Milenio public bus system, you've found the right place.




Soluciones, Carrera 5 #26-31, Torres del Parque, La Macarena. Tel. +57-1-243-7613. It may look like a convenience store from the outside, but don’t be fooled. Inside — in addition to grocery items — you’ll find creative and artsy gift ideas, including art books and Mexican Day of the Dead items, tea bags named after “heroes and villains” from history and hot-pink busts of national historical figures including Santander and Bolivar. http://almacensoluciones.com/

Restaurants


La Frontera, Carrera 4A No. 26A-05, La Macarena. Tel. +57-1-281-1653. This well-regarded venue serves Mexican cuisine in a Bohemian atmosphere.


La Gloria is one of the hard-to-miss restaurants in Bogota's La Macarena district, thanks to its hot-pink facade.

La Gloria, Calle 26A #4-38, La Macarena. Tel. +57-1-479-3704. Belgian and French flavors influence the cuisine at this restaurant, which is hard to miss thanks to its bright pink façade.

Te Encantaré, Calle 26A #4-12 La Macarena. Tel. +57-1-286-0809. This “aphrodisiac” restaurant, bathed in sumptuous red décor, features creative dishes supposedly designed to inspire passion.www.restauranteteencantare.com

www.latinflyerblog.com

Monday, February 21, 2011

Vamos Colombia Tour takes you to Barranquilla Carnaval March 3-14, 2011

Contact us at Vamos Colombia Tour website. Or email us at info@vamoscolombiatour.com.

Barranquilla Carnaval 2011 set to begin soon



The 2011 edition of the world famous and UNESCO-recognized Barranquilla Carnaval is soon upon us! The highlights are on the weekend of March 5-8, 2011, just before the start of Lent.
The vastly improved website can be found at:
http://www.carnavaldebarranquilla.org/

The schedule can be found at
http://www.carnavaldebarranquilla.org/Programacion

Information about the many kinds of traditional Colombian dance and rhythms that are found at the Carnaval can be found on the website:
http://www.carnavaldebarranquilla.org/DanzasExpresiones



Vamos Colombia Tours will be happy to help you enjoy the Carnaval in luxury and with all the amenities.

www.vamoscolombiatour.com

Cartagena Music Festival, January 2011





Check out the series of blogs from the Cartagena International Music Festival in January 2011 posted on the website of Americas Quarterly.

http://www.americasquarterly.org/node/2086

The official website of the music festival is here: http://www.cartagenamusicfestival.com/

Slate visits the Most Beautiful Undiscovered River in the World - In Colombia!

Slate magazine (online) has discovered the most beautiful undiscovered river in the world, and, yes, it is in Colombia! (shhh - don't tell!)

Check out

The World's Most Beautiful River

The first hidden wonder of South America.

Serrania de la Macarena national park. Of course it is not really a secret but it is just a bit out of the way. Well worth the trek, however. More info can be found in Colombia's adventure magazine:
http://www.revistaviajesyaventura.com/7maravillososparques/nacionales.html

Wall Street Journal Discovers Colombia, Feb 2011


The Wall Street Journal discovers Colombia! Check out their article "Navigating Through Colombia" from Feb 11, 2011.













http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704422204576129983333333792.html

FICCI: Cartagena International Film Festival 2011








The ever more popular and well organized Cartagena International Film Festival is set to get underway February 24-March 3, 2011. It will feature films from Colombia as well as all over Latin America and the world. The country of Mexico is features as the country of honor this year.

The Colombian film "Los Colores de la Montaña" (The Colors of the Mountain) will be shown on the opening night of the 51st annual Cartagena Film Festival.

The film, which is directed by Carlos Cesar Arbelaez, has also been nominated for the Official Fiction Competition.

From the website: http://ficcifestival.com/int_peli.php?id=167
Sinopsis
Director Carlos César Arbeláez avoids falling into the all-too-easy trap of preying on our natural protective instincts and resorting to emotional manipulation in this, his first feature film, which offers a moving, but credible portrait of the Colombian conflict through the eyes of three children from La Pradera, a village in the Antioquia mountains. In the foreground we watch as the children lose their ball in a minefield, while the real tragedy unfolds in the background when the villagers find themselves trapped in enemy crossfire.

The closing night is an animated film, Chito y Rita. From the website's summary:
Sinopsis
A wonderful feature animation for adults that tells the epic story of Chico, a young pianist with big dreams, and Rita, a beautiful singer with an extraordinary voice. Set in Havana of the Forties, the bolero sets the tone for what Fernando Trueba describes as a homage to Cuba, its people and its music, and a tribute to love stories and filmmaking. Some 70 musicians and actors were involved in the making of Chico & Rita, including acclaimed Cuban musicians like Bebo Valdés, who retires on this high note having passed the milestone of age 90. Fruit of the successful collaboration between director Fernando Trueba and the artist Javier Mariscal, Chico & Rita has received excellent reviews from critics and musicians the world over. “Love is a song you will never forget” is the tagline of this movie which bagged first prize at the Holland Animation Film Festival.


The main website is found at http://ficcifestival.com/index.php


Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Congratulations to Mr. Tourism Colombia 2010

Congratulations to Alejandro Villamil on his new title of Mr Colombia Tourism 2010.

A competition of over 20 contestants took place in the well known tourist resort of Melgar, Colombia.

Our very own spokesmodel and guide Alejandro was the wining contestant and was named Mr. Tourism 2010. We are proud to say "we knew him when" and wish him congratulations on continuing success.

Clients of Vamos Colombia Tour already know what a wonderful person he is.

Monday, November 22, 2010

This article was on the newspaper and I hope you enjoy as much as I am my Colombian friends do.

"THE WASHINGTON POST.

Medellin, Colombia, from drug violence to tourist destination

Medellin, Colombia's second-largest city, features a bustling nightlife, museums, an aquarium, cable cars and more.

Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, November 19, 2010; 10:57 AM

At 7 p.m. on a Friday, the patio of Basilica, a Peruvian-Asian restaurant on one of the most prized street corners in Medellin, Colombia, is bustling. Young men in polo shirts and blue jeans are passing around a bottle of rum at the bar, and women in miniskirts and stilettos are being seated at tables marked "Reserved." Sushi chefs are busily making California rolls against a fake waterfall backdrop, their movements almost in sync with the Lady Gaga and Madonna tunes reverberating all around.

As the night wears on, the party spills out onto the sidewalk and into the street, which is closed off by police barricades. Young boys accost the revelers, hawking everything from chewing gum to bracelets. ("Una fresa para la princesa?" asks one, offering me strawberry-flavored Trident. "A strawberry for the princess?") A bar outside the restaurant Barcelona is selling "political shots," including the Hugo Chavez, an arguably toxic mix of vodka, creme de cafe, tequila and soda.

At the Parque Lleras, the park in the square, partyers drink Club Colombia beer as vendors entice them with empanadas and other street food. But there's no need for BYOB, because the many open-air bars surrounding the park are literally giving the drinks away. When my friend Daphne and I order two caipirinhas at Barcelona, the waiter insists that we take advantage of the three-for-one drink special.

Daphne and I observe the mayhem from the patio, comforted by the presence of police officers on several blocks.

Not long ago the mayhem on Medellin's streets was controlled by notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar. In the 1980s and '90s, Medellin was the largest cocaine producer in the world, and Escobar guarded his empire so ferociously that the city became one of the most dangerous in Latin America.

Escobar is long gone, brought down by police in a 1993 gun battle as dramatic as his life. In the past decade, new parks, museums, libraries and hotels have opened in Colombia's second-largest city. Cable cars have been extended up to a mountain with a new nature preserve. Famed sculptor and painter Fernando Botero, a Medellin native, donated more than 1,000 of his works, plus pieces from his personal collection of contemporary art, to the Museo de Antioquia. Last year, Spirit Airlines launched nonstop flights from Fort Lauderdale to Medellin.

That's not to say that the city doesn't struggle to maintain the progress it has made in recent years. Violence has not been wiped out, as gangs compete for territory in parts of the city, making some neighborhoods off-limits. The U.S. State Department issued an updated travel warning last week, saying that violent crime is up in some major Colombian cities, including Medellin.

But Colombia is no longer the pariah of Latin America. Kidnappings have decreased. And the epicenter of the drug war seems to have moved north.

Though I've visited Colombia before - my father is Colombian and I have lots of relatives there - I'd never been to Medellin. But when Daphne and I decided to spend 21/2 weeks traveling through Colombia, we couldn't resist checking out the country's most notorious city. On our way from Cartagena to Bogota, we decided to make a stop in the City of Eternal Spring.

Upstairs, downstairs

I'm afraid to look down. We're on our way to Parque Arvi, a new ecological playground on a mountaintop, riding in a cable car that soars high above the slums that Escobar had built along the side of one of the mountains that ring Medellin.

The cable cars were originally built to connect Medellin's poorest neighborhoods to the rest of the city, but they've drawn tourists with their spectacular views. In February, the city extended the original cable car line from Santo Domingo Savio, which has struggled with drug violence, to Parque Arvi. Santo Domingo is the site of one of the many libraries that former mayor Sergio Fajardo had built to revitalize neighborhoods throughout the city. Designed by architect Giancarlo Mazzanti, theblack three-building complex stands out on the mountain slope.

Toward the end of the 15-minute ride, we go from traveling on an incline above houses to gliding in a straight line above a forest. We feel like characters in "Return of the Jedi." Where are the Ewoks hiding?

The Parque Arvi station is made of wood to blend in with the trees. So far, only one of its six planned parks is open to tourists and residents. A shuttle bus takes us to Piedras Blancas (White Stones), where we can canoe, zip line or go horseback-riding. There are barbecue huts, restaurants and bars along the way.

The bus drops us off in front of the recently opened Piedras Blancas Hotel, which, like the cable car station, was built mostly of wood to fit in with the landscape. We take a hike along the trail that leads from the hotel down to a lake, reading signs along the way that announce what kinds of insects we might expect to see. Not too keen on insects, we skip the butterfly museum at the end of the trail in favor of a leisurely walk around the grounds, following a group of schoolchildren on a class trip.

When the altitude (we are about 8,200 feet above sea level) starts getting to us, we hop back on the cable car, joined by a family of six.

"How beautiful that forest is," exclaims Doralba Lopez, a Medellin resident, to her grandkids. It's their first visit to Parque Arvi. Before the cable car was built, residents would have to take a bus up the mountain through dangerous neighborhoods.

At the bottom of the mountain, we hop on the subway to the Museo de Antioquia. Paisas, as residents of Medellin and the surrounding Colombian state of Antioquia are known, are even prouder of being from Antioquia than they are of being from Colombia. So it comes as no surprise that their museum highlights the works of native sons and daughters, however obscure. I am captivated by a 1929 self-portrait by Eladio Velez. You can see every vein in his hand.


But since this is Botero's homeland, I'm most curious about his work. My favorite is not one of the many bronze statues that dot the Plaza Botero across the street but his painting "Death of Pablo Escobar." There's the infamous drug lord, standing on the roof of a house, his shirt unbuttoned, with a gun in his hand, his eyes closed as a barrage of bullets mows him down.

That's the duality of Medellin: It's a place that can produce both a great artist and a criminal mastermind. I thought of what a British journalist friend who lives and works in Medellin had told us: "Paisas represent the best and worst of Colombia."

Party hearty

It's midnight Saturday, and we're in Barrio Colombia, a neighborhood that reminds me of New York's Meatpacking District. It's the site of warehouses-turned-nightclubs where bouncers check IDs and make you wait in long lines for no apparent reason.

At Kukaramakara, a band onstage belts out Colombian singer Shakira's World Cup song. Blue and white balloons drop from the ceiling and the crowd goes wild, jumping up and down and singing along. Lights flash and the dance floor gets smoky.

I'm talking to a German tourist named Torsten Baurlen. He lives and works in Mexico, which is now as notorious as Colombia was years ago. "I like it here," he says. "The people are charming."

The band ends its set and the deejay plays the Black Eyed Peas' party anthem "I Gotta Feeling." Once again the crowd starts jumping. Torsten and I can't help joining in.

Paisas are known as many things: hard workers, skillful entrepreneurs, formidable beauty pageant contestants - and party animals in good times and bad. After one night of clubbing, I could understand why our British journalist friend called Medellin dizzying.

For a more traditional Colombian experience, we head to El Suave, a dark, hidden two-story salsa club that even our cabdriver has a hard time finding. Coming along are my two 20-something half-nieces, who have lived in Medellin for years. At the club, each table is required to order at least one bottle of liquor. Most people are drinking either rum or aguardiente, the anise-flavored national liquor. In honor of our host city, we order a small bottle of Medellin rum.

We sit timidly at our table as men come up every few minutes and politely ask us to dance. My niece Jenny takes one of them up on the invitation and they hit the dance floor, their hips gyrating. This is a place for serious salsa dancers, and Daphne and I choose to watch rather than participate. Watching salsa dancing is just as entertaining as dancing it.

At Mango's, perhaps Medellin's most popular nightclub, I feel as though I've walked into a Texas bar. The club is designed to look like a ranch, and there's John Wayne and Coca-Cola paraphernalia all around. The faucets in the bathroom are shaped like horses' heads. Onstage, go-go dancers flash their ample bosoms, barely hidden beneath skimpy tank tops (Medellin is also known for its many plastic surgeons), alongside shirtless men with six-pack abs. The deejay is spinning American club hits, interspersed with the occasional reggaeton tune. A group of American guys starts chatting us up. This seems more meat market than Meatpacking District. By 4 a.m., we decide we've had enough. Medellin does not want to say good night, but we do.

What lies beneath

Paramilitaries once controlled the town of Guatape, a two-hour bus ride from downtown Medellin. Pablo Escobar had a country home there, as did many other drug lords.

Now you can take the train to the Caribe metro station and hop on a bus to Penon de Guatape, a large rock formation beside a reservoir built by the Colombian government. (The U.S. State Department urges caution when traveling by bus outside urban areas, but we felt safe and weren't the only foreign tourists on our bus.)

There are no real stops along the way. The bus just stops whenever someone hails it, and it doesn't stop stopping even when it's packed. Along the way, we see horses, cows and lots of food stands, some with chorizos hanging out front. A cow holds us up at one point when it decides to cross the road - very slowly.

When we arrive, we're swarmed by locals offering us donkey rides to the foot of the rock, but we prefer to walk. Along the way, we meet David Leonard, an Australian music producer visiting his friend Michael Lawless, who lives and works in Bogota. Lawless, originally from Australia, has visited Medellin numerous times. "When I came here eight years ago, there were no restaurants," he said. "Now there are tons."

We climb up nearly 650 steps wedged in a vertical crack that runs to the top of the rock. Standing at the summit, we stop thinking about how sore our legs are going to be the next day. The panoramic view of the man-made lake beside the rock, with its many islands, is extraordinary. We spot a hotel with a pool on one of the islands and wish we could spend the night there.

The climb has made us hungry, so we take a cab from the base of the rock to Guatape, a delightful little town with houses painted purple, blue, pink, yellow and other happy colors. The lower half of every building sports zocalos, woodcarvings that depict horses, flowers, llamas and other animals.

We have lots of choices for lunch, although the several restaurants with outdoor seating along the lake all offer similar menus. The one constant is the bandeja paisa, a staple dish of Medellin that includes arepas (corn cakes), rice, beans, avocado, fried plantains, chicharron (pork rind), fried egg and either ground beef or steak. We opt for lighter fare: the trout, a Guatape specialty.

Next up is a motorboat cruise of the lake to see Escobar's house. Our captain, Eudoro Diaz, tells us that we are cruising the largest artificial lake in Colombia and shows us the lakeside homes that belonged to Escobar's rivals. Then he points out La Manuela, Escobar's house, named after the drug kingpin's daughter. All that's left is a bombed-out shell that was looted after Escobar's death by people who believed that he'd hidden money in the walls. Although he shows tourists Escobar's former home, now government-owned, Diaz doesn't much like talking about the drug lord. Medellin is trying to forget that part of its history, he says.

Floating on, we arrive at a metal cross atop the steeple of a submerged church. When the lake was created in 1978 to provide water to Medellin, the town of Viejo Penol had to be flooded. We stop at Puerto de la Cruz, a restaurant and museum on an island near the cross, to look at pictures of the former villagers, who were moved to Guatape.

The cruise over, we head back to the center of town to catch our bus. With an hour to spare, we lounge on the patio of a restaurant next to the bus stop and watch children play in the town square.

Back on the bus, one of the passengers, a Miami resident, tells us he'd paid $150 for a round-trip ticket from Fort Lauderdale to Medellin. "That's less than what I spend one night in Miami," he says. "I'm thinking of coming back next month."

So am I."

As you can see many people are coming to discover and enjoy Medellin and the new Colombia.


Thursday, September 2, 2010

New Hard Rock Cafe in Medellin


Bret Michaels, an American singer, actor, director, screenwriter, producer and reality television personality first gained fame as the lead vocalist of the glam metal band Poison. Currenly the star of the reality television show Rock of Love and Celebrity Aprentice 3, Bret will be coming to Medellin on the 20th of October for the grand opening of the Hard Rock Cafe located on Avenida Poblado across from Oviedo Mall.Bret, who has been suffering for heart problems since may of this year was recently see hosting the Miss Universe padget and is said to be in good condition following his surgery.The Hard Rock Cafe was founded in 1971 by Americans Peter Morton & Isaac Tigrett. In 1979, the cafe began covering its walls with rock ‘n’ roll memorabilia, a tradition which expanded to others in the chain. Currently, there are 149 Hard Rock locations in 53 countries. This will be the second Hard Rock Cafe in Colombia with the first one opening in Bogota on the 1st of October 2001 3 more cafes are on their works at Cartagena, Cali and Barranquilla