To unpack the foundational mechanism of Socioplastics, one must first dismantle the traditional definition of plastic form, shifting the analytical focus from the manipulation of physical matter to the deliberate sculpting of social and relational architectures. Where Joseph Beuys famously weaponized the term "social sculpture" to assign an aesthetic agency to human conversation and political willpower, Lloveras instantiates a post-humanist correction by recognizing that social relations are inevitably mediated by technical, logistical, and computational layers. The plasticity under examination here does not reside in the immediate elasticity of a community or a performance, but rather in the structural malleability of the frameworks that support them—what the project identifies as "chair-level infrastructure." By approaching urbanism and social organization as metabolic systems, the project asserts that the role of the contemporary practitioner is to map, intercept, and re-engineer the unseen circulation of material and semiotic flows, treating the soft edges of human interaction and the hard cores of institutional infrastructure as a continuous, sculptural surface.









































