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Author:Athanasios T. Seliotis
Date: 6/11/98 8:51 PM Received: 6/11/98 9:32 PM From: Athanasios T. Seliotis To: register@zonezero.com meyer pedro ( register),   I have just had a brief view of your web site. I read the article on The renaissance of Photography. I have to say I am very impressed with the quality of work I read. This article is more than the typical drivel I read about digital photography. I found the article so thought provoking I am going to recommend it be read by all my students in the Science and Society course I teach. Sincerely, Athanasios T. Seliotis  
Thursday, 11 June 1998
Author:Thomas Casey
  Date: 06/11/98 1:34 PM Received: 06/11/98 1:39 PM   I like uncluttered style, very clear and dare I say tasteful, I have not looked at everything but I like what I see. In England there are a lot of magazines on the shelves dedicated to photography but the one I liked the most Camera & Darkroom, an American magazine that is sadly no longer available. Is there a hardcopy version of your Ezine? If there is I will definately subscribe, if not then I will just visit your excellent site.  
Thursday, 11 June 1998
953. J. R. Owen
Author:J. R. Owen
  Date: 06/06/98 8:47 AM Received: 06/06/98 9:07 AM   My address is and I am a retired research chemist who has been in photography the last 50 or so of my 83 years. My computer interest dates from my first CP/M machine to my AT286 to my present 586 with Windows 95. I continue to be impressed by all that is available on the Internet.  
Saturday, 06 June 1998
954. Greg Rubin
Author:Greg Rubin
  Date: 06/06/98 9:33 PM Received: 06/06/98 9:37 PM   Mr Meyer: One of the issues that I am working on deals with current trends in digital photography. Since you are one of the most interesting of the digital artists out there, perhaps you could help me. I am looking for both writers and photographers for that issue. If you could offer a few images for publication, that would be great. Alternatively, perhaps you know of other writers or photographers that could use the exposure and are gifted in their field. Either way, you help would be greatly appreciated. Greg  
Saturday, 06 June 1998
955. Chuan
Author:chuan
Date: 06/01/98 4:03 AM Received: 06/01/98 5:26 AM   hola: soy un apasionado de la fotografia y por eso me interesa vuestra revista informatica. Se agradece el hecho de que se puedan leer vuestros articulos en lengua hispana.   Tan solo he hechado un vistazo en alguno de los articulos , por falta de tiempo, y me han parecido interesantes.   Cuando tenga un concepto mas amplio de vuetra revista ya os mandare un comentario mas explicito.   Un Saludo  
Monday, 01 June 1998
Author:Pedro Meyer
    A few years ago, I received an e-mail from a Swedish student preparing his final report towards his degree in law school. He sent me a questionnaire on what he called then the "balancing of interests in a typical sampling-situation". He added: " I understand you work a lot with sampling pieces of old photographs in your work, and I'd like to get a feel for your attitude in this matter". He was obviously trying to establish what my criterion was around copyright issues from the perspective of an artist.   Here are a few of the Q & As.   Q- Could you start by explaining the process by which you work? (How big are the sampled fragments that you use? Do you manipulate these fragments in any way?) What is the reason behind using this method? (Efficiency, making deliberate references, etc) Do the legal aspects affect the way you work?   Let me start out by pointing out the difference between how I approach the issue of sampling and what others do. That difference relies on the fact that for most of the images that I create with the computer I use my own photography as well. Having said that, if one takes the issue of the "original" to it's full consequence, then one is faced with a lot of issues which have not yet been dealt with appropriately by anyone (from a legal point of view).   For example: unless a particular image is solely about a landscape, (as in nature) most anything else contains man made objects and someone who can lay claim to intellectual rights over the design of the objects depicted within the image. For instance, most shopping malls in the United States stop you from taking pictures without specific permission precisely because they lay claim to the copyright of all that is within their building. No longer is the shopping mall experience the equivalent of walking down your local Main St., at least not in photographic terms.   However, in any traditional "street photograph" someone could claim that the building in the background was the creation of a certain architect; or a sculptor, if it happens to contain a piece of art; or the designer of the advertising in the billboard; or the coat of the lady walking down the street; or the shoes; or the bus; car or tram; the chair; the clock; etc. everything can always be related back to someone who created the depicted objects.   Let us take a look at the image by Henri Cartier Bresson, taken in Athens in 1953, with the two women in black walking down the street. It is obvious that the strength of the image relies on the juxtaposition of the two women with the two sculptures on the balcony of the building in the background. It is quite obvious that such an image could not be created in today's climate of everyone making all sorts of copyright claims.       If you want to explore this issue further, just take at random any set of very well known pictures, and explore how many objects you can find that would follow in this pattern of thinking. You will be astounded how we have ever made it this far without everyone making this into a legal issue. One thing that is sure is that photography will never be the same from here on in.   Returning to my own work for a moment, I would say that the fragments that I use within a picture have no relation to size, they are as large or small as needed, that is the only guide that matters to me. But I have to point that has to do with the fact that I am using solely my own work.   But let us explore another image by the world renowned Henri Cartier Bresson, this time the image is one from Mexico, dated 1964. Here you have the little girl carrying a very large frame towards an opening in a fence of a place we don't know where it leads to. No question in my mind that the image is anchored on that framed picture. In other words, this would be con- sidered in today's' jargon "an appropriation". There is obviously no credit to the photographer who made the picture in the frame. But with present day copyright interpretations this might be considered a questionable practice.       I have taken the example a step forward and brought the little girl carrying the frame into an image of my own in order to explore what the implications are.       The first question that comes up, what portion of the original H.C. Bresson picture has been taken? Is it only the little girl in the back of the frame? Or is the frame with the "appropriated" picture also part of his original image? Because if one could argue that the framed picture is part of his image, then how does that play out with regard to my appropriation of his image? A second question, what is the amount of image that I took from H.C. Bresson's picture? Are the few pixels that represent solely the image of the little girl, his? And if they are, then how many pixels can I take without incurring into a copyright infringement? A question not unlike that which musicians have to ask themselves when dealing with sampling. How many notes can be taken from someone's' music without having it considered a misdeed?   Getting back to the question of manipulation, as you stated in your initial question, asking if one "introduces manipulation" at some point. Well, I see this very differently. Manipulation exists at the very moment the original picture was made, everything else that follows are only ensuing stages of further manipulation. Art is about manipulation of matter and ideas, isn't it? And the final part of your first question is "Do legal aspects affect my work?" Surely they do. No one wants to find ones' work against a wall of legal issues. Think of the implications for Henri Cartier Bresson working today with all the those "lawyers" circling around like sharks trying to see what they could scoop up to feed their hungry appetites.   Q. "The original copyright holder should receive payment and credit for all use of his work, no matter how much is used and in what way. If it's worth copying, it's worth protecting."   A- You have to separate the issues of illicit use that damages the pocketbook of the creator, or the reputation of the persons depicted in the image, or the image maker who stood behind it. The issue of copyright goes far beyond just economic issues.   I had a situation like this occur to me recently in Argentina, where a picture of my parents, taken from a magazine, which in turn was a review of my CDROM disc on my parents' last days, was used to create a billboard, which was plastered all over Buenos Aires, inviting the population to come to a rally in memory of an Argentinean policeman who had been murdered.   The picture of my parents was made out to portray the parents of this alleged policeman who was killed. I obviously had no desire to have the image of my parents associated with that repressive regime or for that matter with any police, especially not the Argentinean who were known for their fascist methods. So I sued the advertising agency that used this picture without my permission. A furor erupted all over Buenos Aires when this event was made public in the newspapers and magazines, so here you have an example of misuse of an image, which was lifted from a traditional source, such as a magazine, and the damage was not so much material as an afront to my parents memory. What price does that have?   Interesting to observe is that with the advent of new technologies, many more people knew about this image and therefore were aware that someone was "stealing" it, and also the fact that the picture was not taken off the CD ROM as many had suspected, but in fact from a traditional medium such as the printed page.   Q--An American law-professor wrote in 1991: "If a neutral observer can recognize the sampled parts, too much has probably been sampled, due to one or more of the following reasons: a. He's taken too much (quantity); b. The sampled parts are too significant (quality); c. The public would assume that the copyright holder of the original photograph in some way authorized the new photograph. Are these reasons relevant? Are the criteria of the neutral observer recognizing the heritage of the sampled parts one that makes sense?   A- I believe that the statement you quote from the law professor has more to do with the traditional way of thinking, of trying to establish how much one get away with without becoming liable for having broken a law.   I view this quite differently, it's like the issue of being "a little bit pregnant", you either are or you are not, there is no "little bit". And again like with pregnancy, it can be either great or it can be a disaster, it all depends. I can imagine of a situation of having taken a lot from another picture, and it still being quite OK. The issue of how much was taken does not determine this as a sole arbiter.   Let me give you an example, which can turn the entire argument on its head. I could take the Mona Lisa image and then create a new image with that reference, there is no copyright on the Mona Lisa, it's in the public domain. But what would happen with the image I just created, would I have no copyright protection for my new image because a substantial portion of this picture is derived from the Mona Lisa? Or, if my picture was copyrightable, would I then have by extension made the Mona Lisa my own? And if not, to what extent would that be true? The question remains: Is she now mine?   Let me introduce you to another of my own pictures with yet another Mona Lisa. This one taken at a Wax Museum in San Francisco.       Sure the Mona Lisa depicted in the frame is a copy made by someone to provide the visitor of the wax museum with the illusion that you are there, witnessing the original Da Vinci in the act of his creation. But my image is nothing but the sum of these representations, which in turn have all their own creators, and so the spiral continues as to the question of what is the final resting point for this issue of "appropriations". It might be interesting to note that most people imagine this picture to be the result of a composite done in the computer. The truth is that it's a "straight" picture, only one with a very much layered reality. So what is the difference if I do this in the computer or not?   Q- At what point would you like to stop someone sampling your photographs? Would it make any difference if it were for an "artistic" photograph or an advertisement? Is the matter of "artistic integrity" f.i., - to be able to determine in what context your picture can be used - more important than getting paid for the right to use parts of your work?   A- A great Japanese master of ceramics famous for his breathtaking beautiful teacups was asked if he did not object to the fact that there were so many lesser artists copying his work. He nodded, and commented that, on the contrary, he was pleased with that. In the future, when someone makes a splendid teacup, they will think it's mine, and all my mistakes will be attributed to those that made imitations of my work.   Aside of what this metaphor teaches us, I would say that if someone uses some of my work and acknowledges the source, as I have done when that has been the case, then I would have no basic problem. Probably, I would also want to see that my portion of the image would be a minor part to his or her creation, and not it's foundation.   Now, if the context would be for a commercial use, I would want to know the exact details of the context. For instance what responsibility do I have towards those depicted in my own images? Aside from the economic issues that would have to be dealt with, I have to retain the integrity of my own work. Today, you can see actors that have been dead for a long time now, such as John Wayne, appearing in a new commercial for beer. He might not have liked the idea of his image coming up in such a context, yet someone is exploiting precisely such a situation using digital technologies to do so. The same happened to Fred Astaire, who ended up in an advertising campaign for a vacuum cleaner, to the great consternation of many.   There are plenty of good motives to protect the integrity of the work that we are doing, when it today's world the possibility for unending alterations are there for anyone to apply without constraint. So the need to protect the work with strong copyright laws is certainly justified. On the other hand, the mood for litigation can get so out of hand that the spirit of creativity can end up being only stifled. It is our outmost desire that the child not be thrown out with the dirty water.   My final words then, where to wish him well with his thesis. Hoping that we would have in him a good new lawyer, with full understanding for the ever more complex issues of representation in the digital age.   Pedro Meyer Mexico City, June 1998         http://zonezero.com/editorial/june98/isshenow.html      
Monday, 01 June 1998
Author:Jaime M. Garmendia
  Date: 05/29/98 8:03 AM Received: 05/29/98 8:08 AM   Estimados Seqores, Les agradaceria me incluyeran en su lista de correo, para seguir recibiendo noticias relacionadas a ZonaZero, al arte de la fotografia, y a los logros de los latinos en estos nuevos medios. Encontre su sitio mientras buscaba links (conexiones?,encadenamientos?) para un website que estoy preparando, para la Red Hispana interna de Dupont. En ella trato de dar a la comunidad latina en esta compaqia una perspectiva hacia afuera, mostrar lo que otros latinos hacen con exito en todos los campos. Incluire un link hacia ZonaZero si no les molesta. Me gustaria tambien incluir un poco de informacion sobre Pedro Meyer y la gente detras de este esfuerzo. Podrian enviarme una corta biografia, o apuntarme a donde encontrarla? Felicitaciones por un trabajo bien hecho! Saludos, Jaime Garmendia Jaime.M.  
Friday, 29 May 1998
Author:Marcos A. Campos
  Date: 05/29/98 1:57 PM Received: 05/29/98 2:07 PM   Querido Pedro, consegui navegar em toda zonezero, muito legal. Acho oportuno discutir a fotografia digital. Estão todos com medo da manipulação da imagem, principalmente no fotojornalismo, acho pura besteira. Nos fotografos já manipulamos nossas imagens , no momento de fotografar. Onde fazemos a luz, procuramos um local bonito, e cada fotografo tem sua carga politica e ideologica na hora de apertar o botão. A fotografia digitalvenho facilitar a vida do fotografo, principalmente para o jornal diário. Minha única preocupação e com a memória, pois pode-se apagar a imagens não utilizadas, com isso perde-se um referencial de uma determinada época. Não sei qual seria a solução. Pedro desculpe não estar falando em inglês, da próxima vou tentar. Gostaria de uma gentileza sua. Estou com uma home page no ar e gostaria de sua opinião, nenhuma foto foi feita com equipamento digital. Abraços Marcos A. Campos  
Friday, 29 May 1998
Author:Alberto Gassol
  Date: 05/29/98 5:59 PM Received: 05/29/98 6:31 PM   Estimado Pedro; Gracias por la platica que nos diste en días pasados, se me hizo muy instructiva y motivante. Me dio mucho gusto poderte ver y saludar después de tantos años y, me gustaría algún día poder platicar contigo mas a fondo algunos de los temas que tocaste. Aprovecho para enviarte el siguiente comentario de tus paginas que me encontré en "The Net" una revista de internet que seguramente ya conoces. Un Abrazo. Alberto Gassol  
Friday, 29 May 1998
Author:Patrick Joseph
ZoneZero URL: http://www.zonezero.com Category: Art Issue: 1296 Content Quality: Excellent Aesthetic Quality: Excellent TechnoSmart Quality: Excellent   Author: Patrick Joseph Author: Patrick Joseph The name is symbolic: 'Zone' in reference to the time-honored photographic technique known as 'The Zone System'. 'Zero' as in the nil component of binary code. The idea is to use the Web site as a place to confront the transformation of photography from the analog mode to the digital one. Semantics aside, ZoneZero takes a sensible approach to the new technology, embracing it without forgetting its subject. You won't find any of the baubles and gimmicks so common to Web design here, just good photography. The work showcased at ZoneZero consists entirely of photo essays, as opposed to mere portfolios. Numerous photographers display their musings and images in understated exhibitions, each collection exploring a theme or place through the camera lens. The general orientation is predominantly Hispanic, with images of *barrios* on both sides of the border, from Joe Rodriquez's starkly journalistic "expose" on gang life in East L.A. to Kent Klitches' "Street kids in Mexico City". Not all of the work is so disturbing (don't miss the almost surreal "Meditations on Mexico" by Marianna Yampolsky), nor does it all straddle the Rio Grande. A few collections do focus on other places: Lars Tunbjork ruminates on the spiritual bankruptcy of an affluent Sweden; Seydou Keita's portrait studio is in Mali, West Africa; and the colorful, Almodovaresque compositions of Marcos Lopez hail from Buenos Aires, the most European city in the Americas. All the photographs are accompanied by commentary from the artist. And, thankfully, the words tend to dignify the work, rather than spoil it with a lot of overindulgent hoo haw (as is too often the case when visual artists talk about what they do). Marcos Lopez won me over with his candid introduction to his collection,"Argentinian Pop". "This is the never ending search for identity," he writes, "in a country that was built with people that came off the ships. The tango we have inside. To reflect the double discourse of Modernity. All this I try to show in my photographs. Besides that, now I'm taking pictures for fun and to exorcise the pain because my girl left me." As I said early on, Web design is secondary here: depending on your orientation, the backgrounds are either dull or unobtrusive. For me, it's the content--the amount and the quality thereof--that make ZoneZero a winner. Editor, Pedro Meyer, deserves credit for putting the emphasis there first. With some refinements, this site could be among the very best of its kind. Overall Rating (out of 18):18  
Friday, 29 May 1998
Author:Miguel Angel Romero Guerra
  Date: 05/25/98 12:24 AM Received: 05/24/98 11:37 PM   Me llamo Miguel Angel Romero Guerra, tengo 19 años y vivo en la Ciudad de México. Me interesa mucho el tema, mejor dicho, el arte de la fotografía y, !que mejor lugar para satisfacer mi gusto que ZoneZero¡ Ésta es la mejor página de fotografía en todo internet pues, además de tener muchísimas exposiciones y muy variadas, tiene otra ventaja: es bilingüe, lo cual abre más puertas para la difusión de este hermoso arte. Aunque no he podido ver todas las exposiciones ( !!porque son demasiadas¡¡ ), si he visto algunas que me gustaron mucho como la de Maya Goded en ese encuentro que tuvo con sus raíces, y otras me impresionaron como la obra de Joel-Peter Witkin, que tiene una visión muy especial acerca de la muerte. Bueno si sigo diciendo todo lo bueno de esta página mi e-mail no va a caber en la memoria del servidor, mejor me despido y sigo disfrutando de ZoneZero. ¡¡FELICIDADES a todos los que colaboran en ZoneZero!! Adios. P.D. Si saben de alguna buena escuela de fotografía en la Ciudad de México por favor avísenme.  
Monday, 25 May 1998
Author:José Luis Meirás
  Date: 05/23/98 5:08 PM Received: 05/22/98 6:41 PM   Mi nombre es José Luis Meirás, vivo en Buenos Aires, soy artista plástico, serigrafista y diseñador gráfico y de páginas web, actualmente me encuentro trabajando en una publicación de arte contemporáneo argentino en la www.  
Saturday, 23 May 1998
Author:Dr. Alberto Rodríguez-Robles
  Date: 05/22/98 8:14 AM Received: 05/22/98 8:07 AM I'll like to be in your mailing list.  
Friday, 22 May 1998
Author:Henry de Souza Barbosa
  Date: 05/22/98 12:30 PM Received: 05/22/98 2:07 PM My name is Henry de Souza Barbosa, 20 years old, I'm brazilian and I don't speak English. I live in Salvador-Bahia and I thought your homepage fantastic!! Easy, beautiful and quikly!!! So, I wish to be registered... Bye, Henry
Friday, 22 May 1998
Author:Bernhard Sbick
  Date: 05/21/98 2:23 AM Received: 05/21/98 8:07 AM   I finally found a place- going to discovour your site- hope to get more infos about fotography and digital adaptaion/technics-  
Thursday, 21 May 1998
Author:Etienne Delacrétaz
  Date: 05/20/98 4:24 AM Received: 05/20/98 8:07 AM   Bonjour, I would like to be register by you. My english is very bad, but I learn and I like it! I saw some very atractive picture-set in ZoneZero. I do photos for advertising since 10 years,but now I'm a little bit frustate because all the photos I've done say nothing! This part of my time (photos for advertising) is good for have money (I have a big familly) and for learn, but now I will give a soul to my personnal pictures, to my personnal work. Now I work for my self and I have more time for take photos with feeling and not only for a command! You can see some "essais" at: I work too on a lot of "pictures-set" for some "concours". When I will be OK with the html-language, I will try to propose you some of them. But first I would really like to be register by you. Thanks and have a lot of Fun! etienne delacrétaz at geneva.
Wednesday, 20 May 1998
Author:Santiago Correa
  Date: 05/20/98 3:06 PM Received: 05/20/98 3:13 PM   Me llamo Santiago Correa soy de Argentina Soy fotografo y ademas doy clse en la Escuela de Fotografia Creativa de Andy Goldstein. Saluda atte: Santiago  
Wednesday, 20 May 1998
Author:Angel Luevano Ramirez
  Date: 05/19/98 11:12 PM Received: 05/19/98 11:37 PM   Espero me escriban o me manden mas información para ser parte de ustedes, me parece una página extraordinaria y me pasiona el fotomontaje en computadora, quisiera tip's pues voy empezando a manejar el paquete de Photoshop. Vivo en México en Tijuana B.C.  
Tuesday, 19 May 1998
Author:Kate & Geir Jordahl
  Date: 05/18/98 2:59 PM Received: 05/18/98 10:36 PM   Thanks you for a beautiful, inspiring web site! Put us on your mailing list!   PhotoCentral is a community program in Hayward, California. We have a gallery, darkrooms, workshops, and classes.   Thank you!   Kate & Geir Jordahl  
Monday, 18 May 1998
Author:Alejandro Silva Arroyo
Date: 05/13/98 1:14 PM Received: 05/13/98 1:07 PM   Soy el Subdirector del Centro de Arte y Diseño, de la Universidad del Bajío. Dentro de nuestra escuela implementamos las licenciaturas en Diseño Gráfico, Industrial y Ambiental, por lo que considero importante tener noticias de Uds. para poderlas compartir con nuestros alumnos (en las tres licenciaturas se implementa la materia de fotografía). Espero consideren esto, para podernos registrar como uno de los asiduos lectores de su WebSite.   Felicidades!!!!   Exelente trabajo.   Saludos. Ing. Alejandro Silva A. P.D. Si requieren mas información de mi Universidad, por favor haganmelo saber.  
Wednesday, 13 May 1998
Author:Xavier Lluis
  Date: 05/12/98 3:53 AM Received: 05/12/98 8:07 AM   Me llamo Xavier Lluis y soy fotografo profesional.Desde hace unos años estoy basado en Montreal(Canada),trabajando como corresponsal para diferentes medios de comunicacion españoles y franceses.Me gustaria recibir mas informacion sobre su proyecto y tambien saber si Pedro Meyer tiene una pagina web.He oido muchos elogios de parte de Marcel Blouin (Mes de la Foto de Montreal) pero no conozco su trabajo.   Atentamente Xavier Lluis  
Tuesday, 12 May 1998
Author:Maria Elena Ramírez
  Date: 05/12/98 9:26 AM Received: 05/12/98 9:37 AM   El propósito de su proyecto me parece interesante.Mi profesión como périodista me permite estar en constante contacto con artistas y fotógrafos, debo confesar sin embargo que el habitar en Montréal me ha impedido apreciar con mayor profundidad lo que sucede en América Latina. La página éditorial de su sitio se refiere al débate sobre la manipulación de la imagen fotográfica, porque no considerar esta simplemente como uno de los elementos del proceso de creación, que mejor ejemplo para ello que la fotografía alemana contemporánea.   Maria Elena Ramirez  
Tuesday, 12 May 1998
Author:David L. Harris
  Date: 05/10/98 9:22 AM Received: 05/10/98 9:37 AM   I just discovered your site. Looks great so far. Me gusta poder leer en dos idiomas. Necesito practicar mi espanol.   Lator gators....   CompuSolve Computer Consulting - Database Application Development   David L. Harris - MS Access95, Access 2.0  
Sunday, 10 May 1998
Author:Chris Plommer
  Date: 05/10 7:23 PM Received: 05/10 7:37 PM   Chris Plommer   I am a Communications Technology High School Teacher, specializing in Photography with my students. I found your website's to be a great resource for my students. Keep it Strong!   Thanks  
Sunday, 10 May 1998
Author:Miguel Angel García Austria y Yazmin Perez
  Date: 05/08/98 5:02 AM Received: 05/09/98 9:52 AM   Mtro. Pedro:   He consultado la magnifica sección que usted dirige, y me parece que esta muy bien diseñada y que a todos los que sestamos interesados en el mundo de la fotografia, nos puede ayudar más de lo que pensamos, ya que ustedes se estan actualizando a diario, ya sea en su revista , en la geleria, en sus editoriales, etc. Por otra parte quisiera comentarles que somos estudientes del sexto semestre en la Escuela Activa de Fotografía en Coyoacán en México, D.F. Actualmente estamos desarroyando una investigación sobre dos fotografos (Nan Goldin y Richard Avedon) . -Los datos que tenemos sobre Goldin es que es una fotografa americana contemporanea y hece dos meses aproximadamente publico en la revista Times, Y recientemente expuso en algun museo de New York. Uno de sus temas principales es sobre las mujeres y la violencia. -Richar Avedon sabemos que trabajo para la revista Harpes Bazar por algún tiempo, así como tambíen se dedico a la foto de modas y de retrato. Como pueden ver no tenemos mucha información sobre los fotografos y quisieramos pedirles su ayuda para saber donde podemos encontrar en este mundom del internet, información escrita y gráfica de la obra de los fotografos antes mencionados.   Por otra parte queremos quedar registrados en el maravilloso mundo de ZONAZERO.   Mil gracias por la atencion que nos presten. Miguel Angel García Austria y Yazmin Perez.  
Friday, 08 May 1998

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