MARIO TESTINO, INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED
PHOTOGRAPHER,
NAMED PRESIDENT OF WORLD MONUMENTS FUND PERU
New York, NY (April 14, 2014) Mario
Testino, one of the world's most well-known and
influential photographers and a native of Lima,
Peru, has been named President of the Board of World
Monuments Fund Peru, the organization's first office
in South America, by Bonnie Burnham, President of
World Monuments Fund (WMF). Mr. Testino, whose work
has been exhibited in museums and galleries around
the world, has long been recognized as a major force
in arts and culture.
In remarks given at the announcement,
held on April 11 at MATE - Museo Mario Testino, the
cultural institution in Lima dedicated to the
exhibition of Mr. Testino's and other artists' work,
WMF President Bonnie Burnham stated, "As a native of
Lima, a city known worldwide for the richness of its
cultural heritage, Mario Testino is the ideal person
to lead the new WMF Peru. Formally creating an
affiliate in Lima demonstrates the World Monuments
Fund's commitment to the heritage of Peru as well as
the whole of South America."
"My interest in Peru's heritage began
as a university student in Lima," explained Mr.
Testino. "Throughout my countless journeys all over
the world, I have always admired the conservation of
historic monuments and dreamed of being able to help
recover Peru's precious national treasures. Leading
World Monuments Fund's Peru affiliate allows me to
accomplish this dream."
World Monuments Fund in Peru WMF has
worked in Peru since 1996 in partnership with local
organizations on nearly 20 conservation projects
that span centuries of heritage and incorporate
training and advocacy. WMF's
presence in Peru began in 2010 with the creation of
the WMF Peru Committee, led
by Marcela Temple de Pérez de Cuéllar, wife of
former UN Secretary-General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar,
until her death in 2013.
Some of WMF's major projects in Peru
include: the important baroque Church of San Pedro
Apóstol de Andahuaylillas, south of Cusco; Huaca de
la Luna, a Moche ceremonial structure near Trujillo;
Chankillo, a pre-Colombian fortified temple complex
in the Casma-Sechin Oasis in Ancash; and the
colonial-era Convent of Santa Catalina that occupies
a large portion of central Arequipa.
In addition to field projects, the
World Monuments Watch advocacy program has provided
opportunities to review the threats to the
protection of more than 30 cultural heritage sites
in Peru. WMF created strategies to assist in raising
public awareness about these sites as well as
developed solutions to sustain and protect the
monuments.
From America's Route 66 to the
temples of Angkor, Cambodia, WMF not only preserves
the world's most important monuments, the
organization also enhances local economies, creates
educational opportunities, reinvigorates local
traditions, promotes tourism, and helps communities
and entire countries recognize their cultural and
architectural treasures while enhancing national
pride.