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Fistro llevame al sircoo jarl ese que llega te va a hasé pupitaa diodenoo. Ahorarr no puedor se calle ustée a wan papaar papaar pupita te voy a borrar el cerito está la cosa muy malar llevame al sircoo. A wan te voy a borrar el cerito ahorarr está la cosa muy malar tiene musho peligro a wan.

  1. 5D. NOPHOTOCOSA
  2. 16D.
    Eduardo Nave. Afternoons in the Pool I. Key to cope with the heat in a summer afternoon.
  3. 23N. NOPHOTO
    Adverse Landscape
  4. 15N.
    Paco Gómez. Mr Diego and Ms Carmen pictured at Vegaviana church entrance. They are the patriarch from a gipsy family deeply rooted in the village. They were cattle traders and they arrived with the first settlers.
  5. 15N.
    Jorquera. Channel III-B. To turn this area into irrigation, during the settlements, channels were built around the village, bringing water from Borbollón reservoir.
  6. 15N.
    Jorquera. Large-Format Camera.
  7. 15N.
    Madrid
    Juan Santos. Souvenir from Vegaviana.
  8. 15N.
    Toronto
    Carlos Luján. Path to the Graveyard. Every single thing in Vegaviana and its surroundings is thought beforehand. There is a path along the Channel, heading to the graveyard, and, at the end, you would arrive to Borbollón reservoir. It is the one bringing all the irrigation to the village and the county.
  9. 15N.
    Eduardo Nave. Fable of Arachne. Seamstress of Vegaviana.
  10. 15N.
    Paco Gómez. Our landlady is called Perpetua but she calls herself Pepi. She rented us her former worker house, where she lived with her family. Now she has a settler house for large families, it is huge, full of rooms to host her grandchildren. She tells us her life by her front door, at sunset.
  11. 15N.
    Paco Gómez. Carmen Kindel.
  12. 15N. Paco Gómez
    Juan Valbuena. Fiesta. 1. Drinking 2. More drinking 3. Friendship exaltation 4. Folk songs 5. You are my father!
  13. 15N.
    Paco Gómez. In the country, scattered houses were built for the plots further away from the village. In the past, whole families used to live in them; nowadays, people hardly live there and they are used to keep the farming implements.
  14. 17A.
    Jonás Bel. Wild roars.
  15. 17A.
    Jonás Bel. 400 kg of watermelon. Before the paella, they distribute gazpacho. For dessert, watermelon for everybody.
  16. 17A.
    Eva Sala. Our Lady of the Fields.
  17. 17A. Carlos Luján
    Perales de Tajuña
    Mr Diego and Ms Carmen pictured at Vegaviana church entrance. They are the patriarch from a gipsy family deeply rooted in the village. They were cattle traders and they arrived with the first settlers.
  18. 17A. Carlos Luján
    Vegaviabba
    Carmen Kindel.
  1. Eduardo Nave. Afternoons in the Pool I. Key to cope with the heat in a summer afternoon.
  2. Adverse Landscape
  3. Paco Gómez. Mr Diego and Ms Carmen pictured at Vegaviana church entrance. They are the patriarch from a gipsy family deeply rooted in the village. They were cattle traders and they arrived with the first settlers.
  4. Jorquera. Channel III-B. To turn this area into irrigation, during the settlements, channels were built around the village, bringing water from Borbollón reservoir.
  5. Jorquera. Large-Format Camera.
  6. Juan Santos. Souvenir from Vegaviana.
  7. Carlos Luján. Path to the Graveyard. Every single thing in Vegaviana and its surroundings is thought beforehand. There is a path along the Channel, heading to the graveyard, and, at the end, you would arrive to Borbollón reservoir. It is the one bringing all the irrigation to the village and the county.
  8. Eduardo Nave. Fable of Arachne. Seamstress of Vegaviana.
  9. Paco Gómez. Our landlady is called Perpetua but she calls herself Pepi. She rented us her former worker house, where she lived with her family. Now she has a settler house for large families, it is huge, full of rooms to host her grandchildren. She tells us her life by her front door, at sunset.
  10. Paco Gómez. Carmen Kindel.
  11. Juan Valbuena. Fiesta. 1. Drinking 2. More drinking 3. Friendship exaltation 4. Folk songs 5. You are my father!
  12. Paco Gómez. In the country, scattered houses were built for the plots further away from the village. In the past, whole families used to live in them; nowadays, people hardly live there and they are used to keep the farming implements.
  13. Jonás Bel. Wild roars.
  14. Jonás Bel. 400 kg of watermelon. Before the paella, they distribute gazpacho. For dessert, watermelon for everybody.
  15. Eva Sala. Our Lady of the Fields.
  16. Mr Diego and Ms Carmen pictured at Vegaviana church entrance. They are the patriarch from a gipsy family deeply rooted in the village. They were cattle traders and they arrived with the first settlers.
  17. Carmen Kindel.
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Diseñado y desarrollado por Julio César González