
Art 54. Owning your time, owning yourself
Instagram Icon-facebook Youtube Producción y alimentación por Michelle Ruiz y Jorge Krekeler Two people, living at both ends of the island of Muisne in Ecuador,
Jarillas, elsewhere better known as Caña Brava (a type of cane), is a reed that usually grows on the marshy banks of rivers. Tlacotal, the Nahuatl name for the place where jarillas grow, is a community in Iztacalco, one of the mayorships in the southeast of Mexico City. The Miramontes River, at that time emblematic for Tlacotal, became a canal; but the jarillas are still in the orchard of the Cultural Center that bears the same name. This cultural center is a reference for Mexico City for being managed from the territorial community, cohesioning the social fabric and the sense of community at the scale of the neighborhood locality, with a tireless work from the culture and urban identity. It is an icon for the development and self-determination of an urban community, involving the third generation, giving tangible form to the demands of the people of Tlacotal in their struggle for the right to the city.
Instagram Icon-facebook Youtube Producción y alimentación por Michelle Ruiz y Jorge Krekeler Two people, living at both ends of the island of Muisne in Ecuador,
Instagram Icon-facebook Youtube Producción y alimentación por Jorge Krekeler What happens when people seeking a transition to regenerative ways of life re- ceive a basic
Instagram Icon-facebook Youtube Producción y alimentación por Jorge Krekeler While walking along Medellín Street on our way to the downtown area of Mexico City, we