
La Fiambrera has been and is part of neighborhood and political networks such as the Lavapiés Network in Madrid or the La Alameda Neighborhood Assembly in Seville. He has collaborated with organizations such as Amnesty International, Molotov or No Person is Illegal, developing campaigns and materials together.
He is co-responsible for the edition of some books on critical art and direct action such as Manual de la Ciberguerilla, Ed. Virus, Barcelona, 2004; Ways of doing: Political art, public sphere and direct action, Ed. University of Salamanca, 2001; o Manual de la Guerrilla de la Comunicación, Ed. Virus, Barcelona, 2000. Members of La Fiambrera have been invited by some academic institutions in order to explain and discuss their work, among them Künstlerhaus Bethanien (Klartext Konferenze Berlin) in January 2005 ; NYU (New Yok University Performing Arts – Instituto Juan Carlos I) in 2004; and MIT (Massachussets Institute of Technology – Visual Arts Dpt.), 2001. Likewise, some projects have been curated from La Fiambrera, such as the Las Agencias Project, MACBA, Barcelona, 2001; or the exhibition No Person is Illegal, Casa Encendida, Madrid, 2002.
Participates in Medialab Madrid with the documentation of the Bordergames video game project (2003). The main objective of the project is the construction of a tool, in video game format and using free software, that makes it easier for young people to develop expressive and organizational autonomy. This would allow them to represent themselves and the present of their community, in an environment in which their cultural traditions mix with the urban context in which they currently live. In turn, Bordergames will function as an instrument of social and cultural coordination and communication, to generate community and share useful information through the game.
Organization: The Worker's Lunch Box