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Rafael Palacios

Architect / Photographer
México
Personal @p.mmood
Contact palaciosmacias@icloud.com

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Con mucha emoción les compartimos la publicación de “La Petatera. Pensamientos en torno al acontecimiento vernacular”.

El libro ofrece dos lecturas paralelas: el escrito de Vladimir Rubio, un recorrido radial a través de 15 breves conceptos que se aproximan de diferente forma a La Petatera: Paraíso: Lo vernacular; La petatera; Rit(m)o; Centro; Vacío; Curvatura y circularidad; Fragilidad, debilidad, blandura; Lentitud, Espera(nza); Duración; Sencillez; Obra(r); Tejido; Retorno… además de un prélogo y un poslogo del propio autor. No hay inicio ni final claro, cada uno de los apartados se ofrece como gajo, fragmento, de un recorrido circular e ininterrumpido. Por otra parte, la publicación presenta una serie de fotografías de Rafael Palacios, realizadas como estudio específicamente para este proyecto editorial, que van dialogando con los escritos de cada apartado, revelando, al igual que los textos, diferentes aproximaciones a La Petatera. Sumándose a ello, nos entusiasma que el libro cuente con un prólogo y dos poemas de Hugo Mujica, poeta y filósofo argentino, escritos ex profeso para esta publicación.

Este es el quinto título de la colección “pensamiento”, una colección dedicada explorar diversas formas de lo que entendemos por reflexión en la arquitectura. Fue realizado con el apoyo de Artlecta y del Sistema de Apoyos a la Creación y Proyectos Culturales, a través de la vertiente Fomento a Proyectos y Coinversiones Culturales, emisión 2024.

Se estará presentando en las próximas semanas en diversos espacios culturales, y se encontrará pronto a la venta en librerías como @artlecta (Guadalajara) @improntacasaeditora (Guadalajara) @foro_arquitectura (Guadalajara) @casabosques (CDMX) @arquilectura.libreria (CDMX) @arquetipo._ (CDMX) @naos_libros (Madrid) @terrranova (Barcelona).


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35
1 months ago


This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago


This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago


This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

This book explores two little known but fundamental episodes in the development of 20th-century Mexican architecture by focusing on two generations active in Guadalajara in the 1920s/30s and 1980/90s.

Luis Barragán started his career in Guadalajara, working on a style much different from his better-known work in Mexico City. There, he practiced briefly as part of a generation of architects known by some as the Escuela Tapatia, a group that produced architecture based on an abstracted and stylized reinterpretation of the region’s vernacular
architecture. The generation of young architects that started to work in the 1980/90s again took up this idea as a basis for their architectural language, producing their own reinterpretation fifty years later. Through selected projects and critical texts, this book tells the stories of these two generations.

Editors: @jesus_vassallo @jamarquitectura
Contributing authors: #Claudia Rueda #Isabela de Rentería
Original Photographs by: @funciono @cesarbejarstudio
Published by: @birkhauser_books
Graphic Design: @lv__gd
Printed by: @gutenbergbeuys


860
22
1 months ago

“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

—Vladimir Rubio


1.5K
14
1 months ago


“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

—Vladimir Rubio


1.5K
14
1 months ago

“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

—Vladimir Rubio


1.5K
14
1 months ago

“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

—Vladimir Rubio


1.5K
14
1 months ago

“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

—Vladimir Rubio


1.5K
14
1 months ago

“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

—Vladimir Rubio


1.5K
14
1 months ago

“Intranquiliza (…) pensar las cosas en su estar-siendo, proceso más que cosas, que al cabo advienen hilos, aquéllos que formamos en la representación de las trayectorias.” —Chantal Maillard

Hay dos formas de demarcar lo que la petera puede ser: la primera, consta de describirla —en los términos más comunes— como una arquitectura efímera: un edificio que, desde 1857 (cada año y a lo largo de aproximadamente 11 semanas —7 para su construcción y 4 más para las festividades—), se ensambla y se sostiene para recibir las fiestas patronales de su territorio, hoy político-administrativamente demarcado como Villa de Álvarez, Colima, México.

La segunda forma, es una demarcación más difusa, permeable y confusa. Si se prefiere: un breve y débil divagar por sus procesos, sus trayectorias y bifurcaciones, inestabilidades y mutaciones, hilos socio-temporales no visibles que, no obstante, también pueden llegar a producir lo que el espacio va siendo.

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Story Save - Công cụ miễn phí tốt nhất để lưu Câu Chuyện, Reels, Ảnh, Video, Highlights, IGTV về điện thoại của bạn.

Story-save.com là công cụ trực tuyến dễ sử dụng giúp người dùng tải về và lưu trữ nhiều loại nội dung, bao gồm câu chuyện, ảnh, video và các tài liệu IGTV từ Instagram. Với Story-Save, bạn không chỉ dễ dàng tải về nhiều nội dung từ Instagram mà còn có thể xem lại bất cứ lúc nào, ngay cả khi không có kết nối internet. Công cụ này lý tưởng cho những lúc bạn gặp những nội dung thú vị trên Instagram và muốn lưu lại để xem sau. Hãy sử dụng Story-Save để không bỏ lỡ cơ hội lưu giữ những khoảnh khắc Instagram yêu thích của mình!

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Tránh tải ứng dụng và đăng ký, lưu trữ câu chuyện trực tuyến.

Chất lượng cao độc quyền

Câu chuyện Hãy tạm biệt nội dung chất lượng kém, chỉ lưu trữ những câu chuyện độ phân giải cao.

Có thể truy cập trên tất cả các thiết bị

Tải xuống Câu Chuyện Instagram bằng bất kỳ trình duyệt nào, iPhone, Android.

Hoàn toàn miễn phí

Hoàn toàn không có phí. Tải xuống bất kỳ câu chuyện nào mà không tốn tiền.

Câu hỏi thường gặp

Tính năng Tải Câu Chuyện Instagram được thiết kế để cung cấp phương pháp an toàn và chất lượng cao để tải các câu chuyện Instagram. Nó dễ sử dụng và không yêu cầu người dùng đăng ký hoặc đăng nhập. Chỉ cần sao chép liên kết, dán vào và thưởng thức nội dung.
Tải câu chuyện Instagram là một quá trình đơn giản bao gồm ba bước:
  • 1. Truy cập công cụ Tải Câu Chuyện Instagram.
  • 2. Tiếp theo, nhập tên người dùng của hồ sơ Instagram vào ô đã cung cấp và nhấn nút Tải về.
  • 3. Bạn sẽ thấy tất cả các câu chuyện có sẵn trong vòng 24 giờ. Chọn những câu chuyện bạn muốn và nhấn Tải về.
Câu chuyện được chọn sẽ nhanh chóng được lưu vào bộ nhớ của thiết bị bạn.
Rất tiếc, không thể tải câu chuyện từ tài khoản riêng tư vì các hạn chế về quyền riêng tư.
Không có giới hạn số lần bạn có thể sử dụng dịch vụ tải câu chuyện Instagram. Nó có sẵn để sử dụng không giới hạn và hoàn toàn miễn phí.
Có, việc tải và lưu Câu Chuyện Instagram từ người khác là hợp pháp, miễn là không sử dụng cho mục đích thương mại. Nếu bạn định sử dụng chúng cho mục đích thương mại, bạn phải xin phép chủ sở hữu nội dung gốc và ghi công cho họ mỗi khi sử dụng câu chuyện.
Tất cả các câu chuyện đã tải về thường được lưu trong thư mục Tải về trên máy tính của bạn, dù bạn đang sử dụng Windows, Mac hay iOS. Đối với các thiết bị di động, câu chuyện được lưu trong bộ nhớ điện thoại và sẽ hiển thị trong ứng dụng Thư viện ngay sau khi tải về.