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005 20251013030047.0
008 211013s2019 mx ab 000 0 spa
020 _a9786079638993
020 _a6079638991
035 _a(CVcHKB)hkb0000010075
040 _aDLC
_beng
_erda
_cDLC
042 _apcc
043 _an-mx---
082 _a709.04 S15
100 _aSalazar Velez, Adriana,
_d1980-
_eArtista
_916723
245 1 0 _aEnciclopedia de cosas vivas y muertas :
_bel lago de Texcoco /
_cAdriana Salazar Vélez.
246 3 _aLago de Texcoco
246 1 _aLake Texcoco :
_bencyclopedia of things living and dead: all things living, all things dead
250 _aPrimera edición.
264 1 _aCiudad de México :
_bPitzilein Books,
_c2019.
300 _a203, 211 p. :
_bill. ;
_c22 cm.
500 _a"Esta publicación fue patrocinada por la Fundación Jumex Arte Contemporáneo y el Ministerio de Cultura de la República de Colombia."
500 _a“Al oriente de Ciudad de México hay un lago que perdió su agua hace más de 40 años y aún sigue siendo llamado lago. Su nombre se enuncia equivocadamente cada vez que aparece en los diarios nacionales, o cuando se escribe en las señales de tránsito a la orilla de la carretera que hoy lo atraviesa. No se le llama “territorio”: se le llama siempre “lago” a pesar de estar seco y poblado de una materialidad distinta”.
520 _aA book that accounts for the multiple transformations of the largest lake in the central Mexico basin. This lagoon was desiccated over centuries, following the Spanish conquest. Through an experimental use of the text and a critical appropriation of a knowledge methodology, this encyclopedia re-interprets the lake as an entanglement of human agents, non-human elements, fragments, and temporalities. "East of Mexico City there is a lake that lost its water more than 40 years ago and is still called a lake. Its name is wrongly stated every time he appears in the national newspapers, or when its written on the road signs on the side of the road that crosses it today. It is not called "territory": it is always called "lake" despite being dry and populated with a different materiality". Thus begins this story that weaves together the condition of a lake eaten by Mexico City. The urban, archaeological and historical perspectives that Adriana Salazar investigated for five years are found in this book, cataloged and described as if they were a forgotten vestige. The Encyclopedia is revealed to us as a story hidden among the rubble, it challenges us from its salt, from the asphalt and from its materials now as waste. Encyclopedia of Living and Dead Things is also a new look at Mexico City and its surroundings. Author Adriana Salazar is a Colombian artist based in Mexico. Her work is transdisciplinary, collaborative and research-oriented. It identifies certain entanglements between nature and culture within Latin American cities.
546 _atextos en español e inglés
650 4 _aApropiación (Arte)
_929222
650 4 _aArte moderno
_ySIGLO XX
_929685
650 4 _aLIBROS DE ARTE
_zMEXICO
_931458
651 0 _aTexcoco, Lake (Mexico)
_vENCICLOPEDIAS
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c17191
_d17191