A country with a future. José Luis Martinat.
12" vinyl (50 loops)
presidential candidates' slogans
Edition: 250
Limited editions: 30
Spanish
2016
In 2016, José Luis Martinat, in collaboration with Meier Ramírez, created the publishing house's first sound project: a 12" vinyl record containing a selection of fifty loops of electoral slogans taken from Peruvian political history.
The slogans seek to convey deep feelings of hope, strategically repeating words like "change" and "transformation." Words that evoke forward movement, a march toward progress, the idea of a country with a future.
These slogans were expressly created to be read and heard repeatedly. Time would prove that these widely disseminated promises were nothing more than false political mantras.
12" vinyl (50 loops)
presidential candidates' slogans
Edition: 250
Limited editions: 30
Spanish
2016
In 2016, José Luis Martinat, in collaboration with Meier Ramírez, created the publishing house's first sound project: a 12" vinyl record containing a selection of fifty loops of electoral slogans taken from Peruvian political history.
The slogans seek to convey deep feelings of hope, strategically repeating words like "change" and "transformation." Words that evoke forward movement, a march toward progress, the idea of a country with a future.
These slogans were expressly created to be read and heard repeatedly. Time would prove that these widely disseminated promises were nothing more than false political mantras.
12" vinyl (50 loops)
presidential candidates' slogans
Edition: 250
Limited editions: 30
Spanish
2016
In 2016, José Luis Martinat, in collaboration with Meier Ramírez, created the publishing house's first sound project: a 12" vinyl record containing a selection of fifty loops of electoral slogans taken from Peruvian political history.
The slogans seek to convey deep feelings of hope, strategically repeating words like "change" and "transformation." Words that evoke forward movement, a march toward progress, the idea of a country with a future.
These slogans were expressly created to be read and heard repeatedly. Time would prove that these widely disseminated promises were nothing more than false political mantras.