« June 2012 »
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics ал
Aircraft Argentina
Antique Furniture
Antique Tractors
Antiques
Apartment Rent
Argentina
Argentina Travel
Art
Art Museum Gallery
Artdealer
Arte BA
Auction Mercado Libre
Auction Tour for Arts
Bitcoin
Bob Frassinetti
Bobo
Book Travel
Brazil
Buby, Die Cast, Argentina
Buenos Aires Historical
Buildings & Bridges
Calender
Carriages & Horses
Cars Made in Argentina
Cheap Hotels
Chile
Chinas R'Evolution
Classic Art Argentina
Claudio Giannini
Collectables
Contact us & Suscription
Counter
Cultural Tours
Dakar Rally South America
Daniel Perez Acosta
Delta Buenos Aires
Design
Die Cast 1/87
Donate
Erotic Art
Events On Going
Expedition
Faena Hotel And Universe
Farms in Argentina
Fashion & Leasure
Fashion Research
Father Christmas
Fishing in Argentina
Flea Markets
Flying & Airplanes
Food & Wine in Argentina
Francisco Adaro
Frassinetti Biz
Gallery Nights BA
Garbage Pail Kids
Glass made in Argentina
Goldvarg Collection
Golf in Argentina
Guns & Weapons
Guyana
Helmut Ditsch
Horse Drawn Wagons
Horvath G.A.
House Boat Builders
How to Buy Real Estate
Insulators
Janos Viski
Jazz
Jenny Fortune
Jorge Luis Garay
Jorge Preloran
Juan Reos
Juegos Eran los de Antes
Juguetes Alquiler
Lamardeluz
Leopoldo Torres Aguero
Liberato Spisso
Life on Line
Lighthouse Documentary
Lighthouse Tour
Lighthouses & Shipwrecks
Lomograpy Art
Lonely Planet
Maria Eugenia Villaseca
Marino Persico
Market Place
Martin Di Girolamo
Martin Garcia Island
Miller & Hillyer
Monique Rozanes
Motorcycle
Motorcycle Argentina
Muky, Die Cast, Argentina
Museum Gallery
Music
Native & Exotic Trees
Native Art
Neon Lights
Norberto Barabino Devoto
Old Cars of Argentina
Paparella, Aldo
People and Communities
Personal Shopper Tour
Quintanilla, Alberto
Rally Classic Car Tour
Real Estate Argentina
Religions Tours
Religious Art
Restaurant
Route 40 Tour
Royal Road
Rules & Regulations ar
San Telmo
Sao Paulo, Brazil
Simone Gentile
Steam Tractors
Street Shows
Susana Gimenez
Sushi in Buenos Aires
Tango Tours
Tigre & Delta
Tips for Buenos Aires
Toy Museum, Action Figure
Toy Museum, Comic Story
Toy Museum, Girl Toys
Toy Museum, News
Toy Museum, Research Work
Toy Museum, Trading Cards
Toy Museum, TV Toys
Toy Museum. Wrestling
Toy Museum; Ethnic Toys
Toy Museum; Robots
Train Travel Argentina
Trivino Hernandez
Uruguay
Video Clips
Villa de Tulumba
Vito Campanella
Water + Land
William Kuitica
Yachts and Motor Yachts
Bob Frassinetti.
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
The Buenos Aires Artdealer Net
The Buenos Aires Art Dealer
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum News Blog
Lonely Planet Guide and Bob Frassinetti
All about Bob Frassinetti Arts and Antique Dealer
Bob Frassinetti on eBay
Art Collector and Antiques Dealer
The Buenos Aires Artdealer NET

Toy Museum
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum
Kids en la web.com
Muky, Argentina Hotwheels
Garbage Pail Kids made in Argentina
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum Exhibit
Design Furniture for Art and Toy Exhibit
Juego del Sapo

Collectibles
Collectibles found in Argentina
Art Glass

Food & Wine
Food & Wine
Eating Pizza in Buenos Aires
Food and Wine
Los Morteros Restaurant in Purmararca

The Buenos Aires Art Dealer
The Buenos Aires Artdealer Net
iPhone application for the Buenos Aires Artdealer net
Bob Frassinetti Artdealer Net & Biz

Toy Museum Forum
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum Forum

Food & Wine Photo Gallery
Curry in the Kitchen, Image Gallery
Los Morteros Restaurant in Purmararca
Food and Wine Argentina
Boutique Restaurant. La Florida Colonia Uruguay
Inside La Florida
Argentine food Asado name for Barbeques
See Picture Image Gallery for, Asado
Hesperidina is Argentinas most famous aperitif.
Eating Pizza at Las Cuartetas

Art for Sale Gallery
J Viski oil painting for sale
Leopoldo Torres Aguero oil painting for sale
Religious Painting of South America & Argentina
Image Photo Gallery for Quintanilla, Alberto.
Francisco Adaro, up coming artist mural artist
Monique Rozanes is a brilliant contemporary artist.
Spisso Liberato was a great Argentinean artist
Francisco Adaro, erotic art.
Francisco Adaro
Relegoius Art for sale
Viski Largest World Picture Gallery
Vito Campanella Art Argentina
Leopoldo Torres Aguero and Monique Rozanes
Contemporary Art Argentina
Jose Trivino
Jorge Luis Garay in Dean Funes
Jorge Luis Garay

Insulator Photo Gallery
Glass Insulator Argentina
Porcelain Insulator Argentina
French Insulator only found in Argentina
Silver or Grey Insulators made in Argentina
Insulators out in the Wild
Insulators found along the roads in Argentina

Books Review and for Sale
Book on Lighthouses in Argentina
Book on Steam Train in Argentina
Book on Shipwrecks around Argentina,South Atlantic
Book on Soccer - Football Trading Cards, Argentina
Book on Highway Route 40
Book on Pop Star Diva Susana Gimenez
Book on Buby,diecast toys made in Argentina.
Book on Art Fileteado
Kaiser, Ika Industries Argentina
The legend of Time Travel

Photo Gallery For Art Dealer
Vito Campanella
Leopoldo Torres Aguero and Monique Rozanes
Arte BA 2006 Argentina
Francisco Adaro, up coming artist from Argentina
Francisco Adaro
Francisco Adaro,erotic art.
J Viski,Janos Viski. 1891- 1961 Hungary Photo Gallery
Cloudio Giannini, Argentina
Jorge Luis Garay Dean Funes

Toy Museum Picture Gallery
My Little Pony, Argentina Photo Gallery
Buby Photo Book, Photo Gallery
Strawberry Shortcake, Frutillitas made in Argentina Photo Gallery
Toy Tractors & Farm Toys,Argentina.Photo Gallery
The Giants Attacking You , Los Titanes de Atakan, CD.Photo Gallery
Super Powers, Super Amigos, Argentina.Photo Gallery
Robot's from Argentina. Image Gallery
Batman CollectiblesPhoto Gallery
Buby Die cast, Sample Photo Gallery
Toy Soldier, Lead & Plastic Photo Gallery
Mazinger Z Argentina, Photo Gallery
Duravit Indian Rubber, Photo Gallery
Buby Estanciera IKA Die cast, Photo Gallery
The Incredibles in Argentina Photo Gallery
Estanciera IKA by Buby re painted model
Kaiser Frazer Willy Station Wagon
Gallery of Robot & Space Toys made in Argentina
Kaiser Frazer Carabela Manhattan, made in Argentina
Art and Toy Museum Exhibit Furniture
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum Picture Gallery
Robots and Space Toys made in Argentina
Gallery Nights, BAC and The Buenos AIres Toy Museum

Carnival Glass Photo Gallery
Carnival Glass made in Argentina

Bob Frassinetti Video & Photo Gallery
Bob Frassinetti in the news
Cultura Cero
Profile of a Journalist
Bob's Photo Album
Cheap Hotels
Cheap Hotels World Wide
Documentary, The Masters of the Universe
Video Bob Frassinetti
Bob Frassinetti Photo Album
Bob Frassinetti and Lonely Planet Guide Books
Fire Places and Chimneys
Hanky Panky

Buenos Aires Architecture Video & Photo Gallery
Architecture, Buenos Aires. Argentina
Bridges in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Buenos Aires Buildings and Sights
Pilar Church Recolecta
Recoleta Cemetery Buenos Aires
Recoleta Cemetery Buenos Aires
Palermo Hollywood and Soho, Buenos Aires
Palermo Hollywood Part Two
Down Town Buenos Aires
Down Town buildings, shops , art galleries, hotels and more
Art and Light Lighthouses

Lighthouse & Shipwrecks Video & Photo Gallery
Lighthouse at Medanos Point
Helmets of the Deep Collectibles
Jose Ignacio, near Punta del Este, Uruguay
Walking around Colonia, Urugauy
Buenos Aires to Colonia, Uruguay.
Lighthouse on Martin Garcia Island
Lighthouses Argentina.
East Point Lighthouse Uruguay, Punta del Este.
Perlas Islands Submarine,the true story
Lighthouses in Argentina & Uruguay
Art and Light Lighthouses

Steam Tractor & Old Tractor Photo Gallery
Steam Tractors,found in Argentina
Old Tractor's Made in Argentina
Old Tractors found in Uruguay
Lanz Bulldog and the Pampa Tractor from Argentina
Antique German Tractors from South America
David Brown 50D Found and Sold
British Made Steam Train Crane 1900's
Old Patagonia Express La Trochita Photo Gallery

Trains in Argentina Photo Gallery
The Old Patagonia Express
Trains in Argentina
Train Tours for Argentina

Photo Gallery on Buenos Aires,San Telmo as well as other Flea Markets
San Telmo Flea Market, Image Gallery
Down Town Buenos Aires,Image Gallery
Railway Station Flea Market, Image Gallery
Mercado de las Pulgas Buenos Aires

Collectibles Photo Gallery
Enamel Advertising Signs found in Argentina,Image Gallery.
Vintage Telephone Equipment found in Argentina, Image Gallery
Helmets of the Deep Collectibles
Royal Doulton found in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Glass Candy Containers made in Argentina
Picture Image Gallery for Vintage real photos from Argentina.Old photos
First Day Covers Argentina
Diving Helmet Argentina
Ford Falcon Made in Argentina

The Land of Fire,the End of The World
The Land of Fire: The Wondera. The Story begins.Image Gallery
The Wondera, the strange and enicmatic old man

Vintage & Old Cars
Estanciera IKA, Jeep Willy vesrion made in Argentina
Torino Car designed in Argentina
Siam Di Tella, was a trademark company in Argentina
Fiat 1100 Argentina
Rambler made by Kaiser here in Argentina
Fiat 1500 Berlina made in Argentina
Fiat 1500 Coupe
Argentine Kaiser Carabela, see image of this rare Argentine Kaiser
Vintage Cars from Argentina or Uruguay
Kaiser Funeral Car made in Argentina
Carabela Kaiser IKA Argentina,
Rally Car Project in Argentina
Old Vintage Cars from Argentina and Uruguay
Old Cars and Old Tractors found in Uruguay
Classic Car Show San Telmo
Car Show 2006 Argentina
Club Ford Argentina

Art and Antique Tours for Dealers
Lonely Planet and Bob Frassinetti
Mad Dog Antiques & Maudlin travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina
ArtDealer and Pascal Debusschere from Paris,France.
Bob Frassinetti as your Personal Shopper
Giuseppe Pirone
Dr Jenny Fortune
Diana's Bobo lodge. Bed & Breakfast in San Isidro
Valeria del Mar. Pinamar
Father and Mother Christmas from the USA visiting Argentina

Artdealer Tours
Cultural Tours
Tour 2011 Bob Frassinetti
Fashion & Leasure Tours
Religions Tours
Flying & Airplanes Tours
Lighthouse Tour
Train Tours in Argentina
Royal Road Camino Real
Travel Argentina
Route 40 Tour
Art and Antiques Tour
Antiques Bronze and marble Sculptures
Accommodation for Art & Antique Dealers In Argentina

Real Estate in Argentina
Real Estate in Argentina
Real Estate VillaTulumba Gallery Museum Project
Cheap Hotels
Palermo Hollywood, Real Estate Investment

Route 40 Argentina Tour
Route 40 Photo Gallery Patagonia & all Argentina
Route 40 Tour Patagonia Argentina Adventure
Route 40 Argentina Blog
Road Side Sanctuaries for Route 40 Argentina
Car Rally Tour for Highway 40 Argentina
Information on Route 40 Argentina
Route 40 Argentina on Face Book

Art
Street Art
Art Argentina
The Buenos Aires Artdealer iphone APPs
The Buenos Aires Artdealer NET

Antiques
Antiques Argentina

Chile
Santiago Chile for Art, Design and Antiques
The Big Island of Chiloe Chile and its Churches
Antique German Tractors found in Chile
Photo Travel Information for Patagonia Chiloe Chile
Real Estate for Sale in Chiloe Chile
The Museum of Modern Art in Chiloe Chile
Jose Trivino
Lighthouses in Chile
The Big Island of Chiloe Chile Travel Tips

Uruguay
Art and Antiques in Uruguay
Food and Wine in Uruguay
My travels with Pascal and Michele in Uruguay


Bob Frassinetti on Face Book
Everthing on Arts and Antiques from Argentina
Travel Guide for Art and Antiques in Argentina
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum, Argentina
Route 40 Argentina
Royal Road Camino Real Cordoba


Profile Bob Frassinetti Face Book

You are not logged in. Log in
iArtdealer Biz News on Art, Design Antiques to Travel and what's ongoing in Argentina
Friday, 8 June 2012
From The Daily Reckoning U.S. Edition
Topic: Argentina
The Daily Reckoning Presents
“¡Qué Quilombo!”
 
Joel Bowman
Joel Bowman
According to the Sermon on the Mount, “lusting after another woman” is a sin, even if you never act on that lust. But now comes Argentina’s Minister of the Interior to assert that lusting after another currency is acrime, even if you never actually trade your pesos for that other, temptress currency.

“Hablar del precio del dólar paralelo es un acto de ilegalidad,” el Ministro del Interior, Florencio Randazzo, squawked into the cameras earlier this week. [Rough translation: “To speak of the price of the parallel dollar is an illegal act.”]

The parallel dollar, or “dolar blue,” to which Randazzo refers is the unofficial exchange rate offered by the city’s casas de cambios. And thanks to the government’s draconian capital control measures, this rate is about the only rate you’re likely to get.

The Argentinean government’s policy of theft via inflation has created a demand for the relative safety of US dollars. Obviously, a massive flight from pesos would create considerable headaches for the Argentine State and its efforts to control “its” people...and their taxable income. And so, even though there is no official rule preventing the purchase of US dollars (or any other foreign currency), Argentina’s equivalent to the IRS, AFIP, has made it virtually impossible to do so through regulated channels (i.e., banks).

Therefore, the informal exchange houses do a roaring trade responding to a very real and honest demand for US dollars. And there’s still enough business left over to maintain a vibrant market for the “green rate.” This exchange rate is even less official than the unofficial “blue rate.”

The “green rate” is offered by los arbolitos — i.e. “little trees” — who stand along Florida Street waving their arms (like little trees) and offering their exchange services. That rate, currently at 6.20 pesos to the dollar, is quite literally the “street price” for dollars. 

The nearby chart shows the wide — and rapidly widening — gap between the official exchange rate and the blue rate, the most often quoted parallel dollar rate. 

Gap Between the Official and Unofficial Peso/Dollar Exchange Rates

[To keep abreast of the various exchange rates, minute-by-minute, you can check outhttp://www.dolarblue.net.]

Exactly as you would expect, the more money the government prints, and the tighter the capital controls they impose, the greater the urgency to swap pesos into dollars...and the higher the unofficial exchange rates soar.

Clearly, this is a trend that cannot continue indefinitely.

The Argentine State is scrambling to outlaw the consequences of its own recklessness. For years now, Argentina’s Central Bank (BCRA) has brought forth freshly inked fiat notes by the billions to pay for unaffordable election promises. Our North American readers will recognize this crafty monetary prestidigitation as “money printing.”

The practice is nothing new, of course — neither here nor in any country where the tyranny of the mobjority — democracy — enjoys the power to decide the cost to be levied on the minority.

What seems peculiar about Argentina’s case is the government’s Herculean effort to ignore the immutable laws of economics in their pursuit of grand larceny. The country has seen five currencies in just the past century, averaging a collapse every twenty years or so. In 1970, the peso ley replaced the peso moneda nacional at a rate of 100 to 1. The peso ley was in turn replaced by the peso Argentino in 1983 at a rate of 10,000 to 1. That lasted a couple of years, and was then replaced by the Austral, again at a rate of 1,000 to 1. To nobody’s surprise, the Austral was itself replaced by the peso convertible at a rate of 10,000 to 1 in 1992. During the past four decades, when all was said and done, after the various changes of currency and slicing of zeroes, one peso convertible was equivalent to 10,000,000,000,000 (1013) pesos moneda nacional. 

And yet...the president of Argentina’s central bank, Mercedes Marcó del Pont, earlier this year reiterated her commitment and dedication to pathological delusion when she asserted, “It is totally false to say that printing more money generates inflation. Price increases are generated by other phenomena like supply and external sector’s behavior.”

“Phenomena like supply” is correct, of course...specifically the supply of freshly inked fiat notes issuing forth from Marcó del Pont’s printing press.

Like her fellow counterfeiters further north, Argentina’s “Fed Head” maintains a steady program of peso “creation” while bamboozling the population with the kind of nonsensical justifications only a career academic-cum-politician could hope to conjure.

“We’re recovering the sovereign capacity to formulate and implement economic policy,” babbled Marcó del Pont recently before announcing that some pictures will be coming down from the bank’s hall of fame, “beginning with Milton Friedman.”

We imagine Friedman’s oft-quoted observation, “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon,” probably stuck in Marcó del Pont’s Keynesian craw.

This crude behavior is typical of Argentina’s government: If the lessons of history don’t agree with the state’s agenda, simply remove the lessons from the curriculum...or make abiding by them illegal. Which brings us back to Randazzo’s “speech crimes.”

If Randazzo has his way, all discussion of what might well be the gravest challenge facing South America’s second largest economy would be considered illegal; an act, says he, comparable to quoting the price of a stolen stereo.

But if merely talking about something illegal is, itself, an illegal act, would we not have to slap leg-irons onto Randazzo himself? It is, after all, the reckless monetary policies of the Kirchner government, to which he proudly belongs, that provide the very incentive for the establishment of a parallel rate in the first place. Moreover, would we not have to imprison almost every central banker and treasury secretary in the Western world? Aren’t these the same folks who continuously talk about “easing monetary policy”?

That’s just money-printing... and money printing is larceny on the grandest scale. Maybe Randazzo is onto something after all!

But, of course, he is not referring to the Argentine government’s crimes; he is referring to the supposed crimes of every Argentinian who’s simply trying to protect himself from the Argentine government’s crimes.

The soaring peso/dollar exchange rate suggests that the peso’s days are numbered...again. And the government’s characteristically strong-armed response to capital flight suggests that the government’s fiscal position is a mess...again. Therefore, given that most folk here have seen this show before, some will be tempted to ask, “How did it all come to this...again?”

As we know, Fellow Reckoner, in order to build a big mess, one must start with a small mess. After all, Rome didn’t burn in a day. Intervene here...meddle there...regulate this...tax that. Add a little larceny...a pinch of censorship...and a dollop of mind- numbing propaganda “para todos.” Pretty soon, you’ve got a full- scale political and economic disaster on your hands.

“¡Qué Quilombo!” as the porteños say, banging pots and pans from their balconies in protest. “¡Qué Quilombo!”

Regards,

Joel Bowman, 
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. We pick on the Argentine government because we live in Argentina. And because it’s so easy. Their record, as mentioned above, is simply appalling. But, truth be told, all governments, past and present, devolve into money printing shenanigans eventually. The temptation to inflate was too much for the Greeks and the Romans in antiquity, just as it was for the Germans, Hungarians, Poles, Brazilians, Russians and a dozen or so other states during the last century. 

And let’s not forget the US, currently the world’s most aggressive issuer of “money from thin air.” Since the creation of the Federal Reserve, in 1913, the once mighty greenback has lost around 97% of its value next to gold. More or less what you’d expect from a federally-sanctioned agency charged with protecting the integrity of the dollar.

As the world waits for Bernanke’s next move...hoping...praying for the next round of “QE,” the shrinking dollar trend is only set to accelerate. So, what to do?

There could hardly be a better time to read Addison’s Little Book of the Shrinking Dollar. Co-authored with Samantha Buker, this quick, 254-page read is packed with specific suggestions (47 of them, to be exact) for how you can protect yourself against a falling currency. Don’t sit around and wait for central bankers to steal your money through inflation. Why give the bastards the satisfaction? Instead, grab a copy of Shrinking Dollar today and begin putting these strategies to use.

Posted by bob frassinetti at 6:17 PM
Travel Argentina
Topic: Argentina Travel

Travel Argentina from Arts to Antiques to Collectibles to Old Steam, Old Tractors, .......

All about Bob Frassinetti, ...... press LINK below.

 

Source: frassinetti.com via Bob on Pinterest


Posted by bob frassinetti at 6:01 PM
Art Collector & Design Antique Dealer from Argetina
Topic: Artdealer
Bob Frassinetti, Art Collector & Design Antique Dealer from Argetina Art Collector & Design Antique Dealer Argentina | Promote your Page too
June 2102, La Lucila, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Posted by bob frassinetti at 2:27 PM
The Biz of Bob Frassinetti on .Com
Topic: Bob Frassinetti

The Biz of Bob Frassinetti .com

 

 

cultivating Cactus Pear Fruit, and then processing it into Wine and Vodka
Topic: Villa de Tulumba

cultivating Cactus Pear Fruit, and then processing it into Wine and Vodka

photo

Bob Frassinetti, Enterpreneur in the World of art, art collecting and international antiques dealer as well as free lance journalist from Argentina, Buenos Aires, working on the web, writing both for pleasure and work on art, antiques and collectibles, in and on Buenos Aires, Argentina as well are neighboring countries, Chile and Uruguay. "I've written for several Travel Adventure, Art & Antiques Magazines on and off the web and have researched Toys made here in Argentina, as well as Travel Adventure from Route 40 and Lighthouse Adventures along the Atlantic and Pacific coast, following like always the Dakar Rally from 2009, 2010,2011, and again 2012! Join me now as we are “Building a Gallery Museum in the Province of Cordoba” Real Estate Investment in Art Bricks and Land, we are and have purchased Land for cultivating Cactus Pear Fruit, and then processing it into wine and Vodka, we are Building a Gallery Museum to Exhibit local Art and Artist as well as our exclusivity Art and Toy Museum Collection ........ Travelling for Art and Antiques" in all South America and I have been on line since 1996 .

 

Exporting Art and Antiques World Wide
Living with art and antiques and travelling the south of South Amercia. Argentina, Chile and Uruguay
San Telmo, Buenos Aires Argentina 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Frassinetti.Biz
Bouchard 1170
La Lucila, Buenos Aires B1637AZJ
Argentina

ph: 005491169651955
fax: 00541147990567
alt: 005491144753983

 

 

 

 

Art Collector & Design Antique Dealer Argentina | Promote your Page too

 

 

June 2012, La Lucila, Buenos Aires, Argentina


Posted by bob frassinetti at 2:13 PM
Updated: Friday, 8 June 2012 2:21 PM
Thursday, 7 June 2012
Ona
Topic: Toy Museum, Comic Story

Esta historia es el producto de un proyecto social y colectivo que comenzamos a desarrollar un tiempo atrás.

Comenzó hace un par de años a raíz de una idea que rondaba nuestra propia práctica; producto del trabajo de investigación que venimos realizando sobre la historia de juegos y juguetes argentinos. A partir de nuestro propio trabajo comenzamos a descubrir una amplia gama de improntas culturales y sociales en la producción de juguetes y juegos. Pronto nos dimos cuenta que se trataba de representaciones culturales de gran importancia, mucho más de lo que hubiéramos podido imaginar. En tanto se trata de reflejos objetivados de nuestro presente, pasado… objetos ideologizados de gran valor semiótico y semántico. Asi, frente a tamaño descubrimiento, se nos ocurrió crear un juguete-juego-conceptual de características multimediales, que de alguna manera pudiera reflejar nuestro tiempo, nuestras ideas, nuestros sueños y esperanzas. La historia narra de manera ficcionalizada una de nuestras posibles visiones del mundo. Contempla de manera profunda nuestros pensamientos e ideas del mundo, y busca por medio de la palabra, el arte y la expresión cultural amplia dar cuenta de este presente. Los Onas de la Patagonia Argentina, de la región ligada a Tierra del Fuego siempre han tenido un atractivo particular en mi propia historia –Argentina y personal- y como tal, se fue gestando como interlocutor imaginario de una historia a narrar. Ellos mismos, como referentes reales de un mundo complejo, cambiante y que se niega a cumplir designios absurdos de modernidad infundada han sido gestores de su propia historia. Por su valentía y coraje, aparecen ante mi mirada como exponentes claros de una cultura rica y profunda. La historia es narrada con auxilio de todo tipo de expresiones culturales y artísticas que pueden aportar a gestar un cuadro complejo, rico en sensaciones, personajes y escenarios. La historia comienza en Buenos Aires, con un hombre común escribiendo una historia… tal como estoy haciendo en este momento, cuando en un brevisimo instante su realidad muta, es como si se abriera un mundo  espacio-temporal alternativo---- Aparece de repente en tierras lejanas, y allí comenzara a transitar un camino de aventuras y experiencias vitales realmente significativas.  Espero disfruten estas, las primeras de muchas entregas en las que iremos narrando, esta, nuestra historia.  Bob Frassinetti & The Buenos Aires Toy Team.

 

Ona Legends, Tierra del Fuego; Land of Fire, the End of the World | Promote your Page too


Posted by bob frassinetti at 12:15 PM
Updated: Friday, 8 June 2012 2:20 PM

Newer | Latest | Older