Political graffiti at the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires.
The text translates to "Tribute to the Fallen of the
Police Repression During the People's Rebellion of December 12, 2001." The ant stencils are a separate political graffiti project honoring an activist killed in Rosario at this time.
Inside the worker recuperated and managed factory IMPA
in Buenos Aires.
Student political parties rallying their supporters at
the elections for the student members of the governing council
of the National University of Rosario.
Rosario residents holding the longest flag in the world
(10 kilometers) for the Flag Day celebrations in Rosario,
birthplace of the Argentine flag.
Children's creations hanging from the production workshop
at Rosario's Island of the Inventions, one of the city's interactive
children's spaces. The text says "Design and Manufacture
of Ideas and Utopias."
The lake of Rosario's Independence Park.
A street closure and recycled art production organized
by one of Rosario's Children's Councils and the City of the
Children program. The banner in the background translates
to "A way to think about and transform the city through
children."
A resident of the Children's Farm in Rosario.
The son of anti-mine activists in Jachal, in the Western
province of San Juan. The sign translates to "No Gold",
and it was prepared to protest an open-pit mine being constructed
by a North American corporation, through which 10 Andes mountains
would be demolished and $4 billion of gold and other minerals
extracted out of the country.