What's being said about Panama
The black race in Panama has left a legacy of the Congo dance, and this portrait of a Congo queen wears a crown of woven fabric scraps and brightly colored buttons. The origin of the Congoes goes back to the colonial era, when Europeans carried over the first group of slaves from Africa to our continent.
Devil Dancer is currently exhibited at the Ward Nasse Gallery (178 Prince Street) in the Soho district of Manhattan, New York City. The painting depicts the traditional dance of the Dirty Devils, a religious folk dance in Panama. This dance represents the fight between devils and angels over the soul of a mortal human, and it arose as part of the doctrine used by Christians to convert the Native American Indians.
EIBTM Barcelona 2012
- The Latin American country held 66 international conventions in 2011 and has planned to reach a total of 126 events throughout this year
- Panama will reach at least 40.000 visitors in the next two years, who will take part in more than 15 world events
Lineth Márquez is a Panamanian painter who achieved the exhibition of her artwork in New York, thanks to Artelista. Today she is the protagonist in "From my studio".
Panama has become, in this 2012, a fashionable destination. Its rich and varied culture, native fauna and flora and the diversity of landscapes and possibilities that the country offers to all types of tourists and pocket books make Panama a destination with an enormous magnetism and full of secrets to discover.
Waves at Venao Beach are the biggest attraction in the region of Pedasí, Los Santos province. They are so high and so famous that they attract international events like the World competition for Youth Surf by the International Surfing Association. That has made hotel rooms in and around Pedasí always be full.



