.top-header{ transform: scale(0.5); transform-origin: top left; width: 200%; } Unstable Installation Series
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RecursiveAutophagia in the AgonisticSpace of OperationalWriting: Field Metabolism and Self-Consumption Where the Architecture Holds Only If It Eats Itself — Anto Lloveras — Socioplastics — LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid — ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319 —

Fields die from their own success. When a research programme becomes dominant, it ceases to generate the conditions that made it productive: uncertainty, contestation, friction, incompatibility, and the pressure of unresolved positions. RecursiveAutophagia names this paradoxical necessity: a field must consume its own foundations in order to remain alive. This is not self-criticism in the liberal sense, nor the polite correction of inherited terms; it is structural digestion. The concepts that established the field become obstacles once they harden into common sense, and the field’s vitality depends on its capacity to metabolise them before they become doctrine. The researcher who merely preserves the founders is not being loyal; she is blocking the digestion that keeps the field active. AgonisticSpace provides the terrain where this digestion occurs: not a consensus space but a conflict chamber where incompatible positions are held in productive tension long enough to transform each other. A field that achieves total consensus has stopped eating; it may still speak, publish, exhibit, and convene, but metabolically it is already dead. The agonistic space is therefore not a problem to be solved but the digestive tract of the field, the chamber where incompatible materials are broken down, recombined, and returned as altered substance. The seminar that ends in unresolved conflict may be more alive than the conference that concludes with agreement. OperationalWriting refuses the separation between theory and practice because writing is not the description of this digestion but one of its mechanisms. A text that merely restates the field’s foundations adds volume without metabolism; an operational text consumes existing concepts and produces something the field cannot yet recognise as its own. The book that summarises the state of the art may become a tombstone if it converts living tensions into inventory, while the essay, blog post, manifesto, diagram, competition entry, or protocol that attacks a central concept can function as a digestive act, breaking down what has hardened into obstacle. In architecture, this triad becomes visceral. Modernism, parametricism, sustainability, participation, resilience, and even care die when their founding concepts become stylistic habits rather than structural necessities. The most interesting architectural practices are often those that consume their own methods: abandoning the tool once it becomes mannerism, reworking the brief once it becomes obedience, and using the project text not as explanation but as an operation that digests the assumptions of the commission. The competition entry that only gives the client what they asked for may be technically responsive but metabolically inert; the entry that redefines the brief performs the digestion through which architecture remains a field rather than a service economy. In urban theory, the same logic explains why planning paradigms persist beyond their usefulness. The master plan applied after the city has changed is not consistency but institutional afterlife. Informal settlements, markets, streets, squares, squats, temporary uses, and litigation zones are not merely disorder; they are agonistic spaces where the city metabolises incompatible visions of its own future. A zoning code that achieves total coverage may eliminate the very pores through which urban meaning is broken down and recombined. What changes when RecursiveAutophagia, AgonisticSpace, and OperationalWriting operate together is the end of nostalgia. The field no longer mourns the loss of foundational purity; it accepts self-consumption as the price of continuity. The architect who repeats modernism’s gestures is not extending a tradition if the gesture no longer digests anything. The theorist who protects inherited vocabulary from attack is not preserving rigour but embalming it. The methodological consequence is severe: the only healthy field is one capable of metabolising its own authority. To participate is not to defend the architecture from erosion, but to enter the agonistic space, write operationally, and allow the field to transform through the digestion of what once made it strong.

StratumAuthoring, StratigraphicField and MapDimensioning as the Archival Method of Socioplastics @ LAPIEZA-LAB By Anto Lloveras, 2026

Socioplastics understands the archive as constructed ground. StratumAuthoring turns each layer of production into active material: texts, images, projects, platforms and protocols do not remain as inert records, but as authored strata. StratigraphicField expands this condition by reading the corpus as a terrain where earlier layers continue to exert pressure beneath later formations. The past is not background; it is operative thickness. MapDimensioning gives that density orientation, allowing the archive to be crossed, scaled, indexed and read as architecture. These operators convert accumulation into spatial intelligence. Socioplastics does not store memory; it structures it. The archive becomes a field when its layers acquire dimension, relation and public navigability.

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Refined Socioplastic Grammar Concepts: Advancement and Usage Assessment (Prioritizing DOI-Referenced Nodes) * In the socioplastics corpus, particularly as documented in the MUSE TOME IV and associated bibliography with over 4000 nodes, the grammar operators are explicitly instantiated through dedicated posts, cores, and century packs, many bearing persistent DOIs for citational commitment. This analysis draws directly from high-density references in Core VII (Soft Ontology, nodes 3201–3210), Core VIII (Double Pentagon), Core VI (3000 series), and earlier foundational layers (1500s, 2900s, etc.), where repetition across tomes, books, and bibliographic cross-citations signals advancement. The total corpus exceeds 50 operators, but usage frequency is evident in scalar thresholds (e.g., 1000, 3000, 4000 nodes), cross-references in bibliographies, and their deployment as syntactic engines. Top-tier concepts appear most frequently as structural anchors in meta-reflections, enabling generative texts via triadic combinations (three operators per exercise). Medium ones support thematic strata with solid but narrower application, while low-tier remain more emergent or specialized, appearing in fewer consolidated packs despite clear DOI presence. This prioritization ensures durability for long-paragraph text generation, as the grammar treats these as relational rules that persist across scales.




Frequently Used Concepts (High-Density DOI Nodes with Structural Impact): These are the hardest operators, repeatedly hardened through cores, tomes, and bibliographic citations (e.g., [320x] clusters), functioning as primary syntactic engines for field coherence and text production. This refined categorization, grounded exclusively in DOI-clear or explicitly indexed nodes, underscores that top operators (especially from Core VII) are the most "used" for triadic generative exercises due to their cross-scale syntactic power. Medium and low provide rich variation for thematic depth.

Tronto, J.C. (2013) Caring Democracy: Markets, Equality, and Justice. New York: New York University Press.

Tronto’s Caring Democracy: Markets, Equality, and Justice argues that democratic politics must be fundamentally reorganised around the public allocation of care responsibilities. Rather than treating care as a private, feminine or household matter, Tronto insists that care is central to democracy because all human beings depend on networks of care throughout life. The book challenges the public/private divide that has historically separated political life from domestic labour, showing that this separation hides the inequalities through which women, racialised groups, migrants and poorer workers are made responsible for care while others are freed from it. Tronto links the contemporary care deficit to the democratic deficit: societies fail both because they undervalue care and because political institutions no longer respond to citizens’ real needs. Against neoliberal assumptions that markets can organise care efficiently, she argues that care cannot be reduced to a commodity, since good care requires responsibility, attentiveness, responsiveness and justice. Her key concept, “caring with”, names a democratic practice in which citizens collectively negotiate who gives care, who receives it, and how care should be supported by institutions. The book therefore redefines democracy not merely as voting or interest aggregation, but as an ongoing process of deciding how people live together, meet needs and sustain a shared world. Ultimately, Tronto proposes a caring democracy in which freedom, equality and justice are measured not by market success, but by whether all people can participate in, receive and shape care under fair conditions.


Piepzna-Samarasinha, L.L. (2018) ‘Care webs: Experiments in creating collective access’, in Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice. Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press.

Piepzna-Samarasinha’s Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice argues that care should be understood not as an individual burden, charitable obligation or private failure, but as a collective political practice central to disability justice. In the chapter “Care Webs: Experiments in Creating Collective Access”, the author foregrounds sick, disabled, queer, trans, Black, Indigenous and people of colour communities who create autonomous networks of support outside, or alongside, the state, biological family and professionalised care systems. The text challenges dominant models of care that often involve control, institutionalisation, abuse, racism, ableism and dependency, proposing instead collective access, mutual aid and interdependence as liberatory alternatives. Through examples such as Loree Erickson’s care collective, Creating Collective Access in Detroit and the Bay Area, and the online group Sick and Disabled Queers, Piepzna-Samarasinha shows how disabled people build survival infrastructures through rides, food, medicine-sharing, access planning, emotional support, fundraising and crisis care. The chapter is powerful because it refuses romantic simplification: community care can be joyful and transformative, but it can also reproduce burnout, gendered labour, racial inequality and uneven access to support. The author insists that disability justice must centre sustainability, consent, dignity, autonomy and the leadership of those most marginalised by ableist systems. Ultimately, the chapter presents care as revolutionary world-making: a practice through which disabled communities keep one another alive while imagining futures beyond abandonment, charity and state violence.


Newell, J.P. and Cousins, J.J. (2014) ‘The boundaries of urban metabolism: Towards a political–industrial ecology’, Progress in Human Geography, pp. 1–27. doi: 10.1177/0309132514558442.

Newell and Cousins’ article argues that urban metabolism is a powerful but increasingly fragmented metaphor for understanding how cities consume, transform and discharge materials, energy and ecological relations. The authors identify three distinct “ecologies” of urban metabolism: industrial ecology, which measures urban stocks and flows through tools such as material flow analysis; Marxist ecologies, especially urban political ecology, which interpret metabolism as a socio-natural process shaped by capitalism, power and inequality; and urban ecology, which understands cities as complex socio-ecological systems. Through bibliometric analysis and literature review, the article shows that these traditions have become separate scholarly “islands”, each privileging certain dimensions of urban space while obscuring others. Industrial ecology is strong in quantitative measurement but often treats the city as a black box and neglects politics; Marxist urban political ecology exposes uneven power relations but often privileges the social over the ecological and relies heavily on qualitative methods; urban ecology models complexity but tends to remain politically underdeveloped. The authors therefore propose political–industrial ecology as a way to revitalise the urban metabolism concept by combining the critical spatial and political sensitivity of urban political ecology with the quantitative methods of industrial ecology, such as material flow analysis and life cycle assessment. Their water-supply example illustrates how this approach can reveal the uneven social, ecological and carbon burdens embedded in urban infrastructures. Ultimately, the article concludes that urban metabolism should function as a boundary metaphor, enabling interdisciplinary collaboration without forcing consensus, and helping scholars produce more sustainable, spatially aware and socially just accounts of urbanisation.


Gillespie, T. (2016) ‘Algorithm’, in Peters, B. (ed.) Digital Keywords: A Vocabulary of Information Society and Culture. Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 18–30.

Gillespie’s chapter argues that the word “algorithm” has become one of the central but most ambiguous terms of digital culture. Rather than treating algorithms as purely technical objects, Gillespie shows that the term operates across different communities: for engineers, an algorithm is a procedural set of steps; for the public, it often appears as an opaque and powerful force; and for social scientists, it becomes a way to discuss the hidden organisation of digital life. The chapter explains that the social significance of algorithms rarely lies only in the code itself, but in the wider sociotechnical assemblage that includes models, data, training sets, applications, designers, corporations and institutional goals. Gillespie therefore distinguishes several meanings of the term: algorithm as a “trick”, meaning a practical procedure for solving a problem; algorithm as synecdoche, where the word stands for an entire technical and social system; algorithm as talisman, used by corporations to claim objectivity, neutrality and legitimacy; and algorithmic as a broader commitment to procedural, automated and quantified forms of knowledge and decision-making. The chapter is especially important because it challenges the assumption that algorithms are neutral mechanisms. Instead, it shows how values enter through choices about what problem is being solved, how data are selected, how goals are operationalised, and how thresholds are tuned. Gillespie concludes that algorithmic systems should be understood as the latest expression of a modern tension between human judgement and procedural systematisation: they may sometimes make decisions more consistent or democratic, but they can also obscure responsibility, reproduce inequality and distance powerful actors from accountability.


Frege, G. (1879) Begriffsschrift: A formula language, modelled upon that of arithmetic, for pure thought. Translated by S. Bauer-Mengelberg. In van Heijenoort, J. (ed.) (1967) From Frege to Gödel: A Source Book in Mathematical Logic, 1879–1931. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 1–82.

Frege’s Begriffsschrift is a foundational text in modern logic because it proposes a formal “formula language for pure thought” designed to overcome the ambiguity and imprecision of ordinary language. Frege’s central aim is methodological: he wants to show how chains of inference can be tested with complete rigour, so that no hidden assumption enters mathematical reasoning unnoticed. The work begins from a problem in arithmetic, especially the need to clarify sequence, number and proof, but its significance extends far beyond mathematics. Frege replaces the traditional grammatical division between subject and predicate with the more powerful logical distinction between function and argument, a move that makes possible modern quantification theory. He also introduces a formal treatment of judgment, conditionality, negation, identity of content and generality, thereby laying the foundations for propositional and predicate logic. One of the text’s most important philosophical claims is that logic should not merely imitate everyday speech, because ordinary language contains rhetorical, psychological and contextual features irrelevant to proof. Instead, Frege’s ideography functions like a microscope: less flexible than ordinary language, but far more precise for scientific and philosophical analysis. The work also anticipates Frege’s later logicist project, since it seeks to establish how far arithmetic can be derived from purely logical laws. Although some later problems arise in Frege’s treatment of functions and identity, the text remains revolutionary because it transforms logic from a loose philosophical discipline into a formal system governed by explicit rules. Its lasting importance lies in showing that the structure of thought can be represented independently of grammar, intuition and psychological association, making Begriffsschrift one of the decisive origins of analytic philosophy and contemporary symbolic logic.


Shelton, T. and Lodato, T. (2019) ‘Actually existing smart citizens: Expertise and (non)participation in the making of the smart city’, City, 23(1), pp. 35–52.

Shelton and Lodato’s article argues that the fashionable shift from smart cities to smart citizens does not automatically democratise urban governance; rather, it often reproduces the same technocratic and neoliberal exclusions that critical urban scholars associate with smart-city agendas. Using Atlanta, Georgia, as a case study, the authors show that citizens are frequently invoked rhetorically as the supposed beneficiaries of digital urban initiatives, yet actual residents are rarely granted substantive power in planning or decision-making. They develop two key figures: the “general citizen”, an abstract and undifferentiated public used to legitimise policy, and the “absent citizen”, the real urban resident who remains excluded from elite workshops, expert meetings and institutional smart-city networks. The article is especially persuasive because it moves beyond broad critique and examines how smart citizenship is produced in practice through meetings, panels and policy discussions. Atlanta’s smart-city initiatives reveal that participation is often limited to experts, consultants, municipal officials, entrepreneurs and institutional actors, while marginalised communities are treated as objects of improvement rather than political agents. Even when community-led data projects emerge, they remain peripheral to official governance structures. The authors therefore conclude that smart citizenship should not be celebrated merely because it sounds participatory; meaningful democratic urbanism requires redistributing power, not simply adding citizens to technological narratives.


The Yellow Bag functions as a paradigmatic situational fixer within LAPIEZA-LAB’s urban interventions: a minimal, portable, chromatic prosthetic that activates context through presence rather than imposition. Recurring since its 2014 debut, this recurring object—bright yellow, everyday in form, radical in use—operates across the Unstable Installation Series as a nomadic device for relational tuning, affective architecture, and socioplastic probing. It is neither sculpture nor prop but an executable operator: empty yet charged, carried on the body, it receives and transmits urban, material, and epistemic signals while leaving almost no trace.


In specific actions, the Yellow Bag manifests radical simplicity. The 2014 debut in Madrid integrated it into a solo/no-solo exhibition alongside meat cuts, posters, and tag-collages, positioning the bag as a color satellite orbiting mutable content. Its mechanics embody SoftOntology and ScalarGrammar. As a hardened nucleus of yellow constancy, it provides chromatic and operational coherence across years and sites; plastic peripheries allow absorption of diverse contexts—Madrilenian streets, Cádiz beaches, Prague quadrennials, international travels—without loss of identity. At node scale, each activation remains agile and ephemeral (carrying sand, drawing circles, ritual presence); aggregated into Century Packs, these form stratigraphic layers of long-duration practice. The bag’s emptiness rejects accumulation, favoring subtraction and metabolic lightness. Theoretically, it advances an architecture of affection: a vernacular readymade whose meaning accrues through duration, care, and situated listening rather than authorship or spectacle. It displaces value from object to relation, critiquing commodity logics and extractivist site-specificity. Geopoetic acts—transporting Cádiz sand to Mexico, for instance—forge translocal connections as affective repair, aligning with MetabolicMesh while resisting overproduction. The monochromatic insistence acts as a visual constant, a “satellite” reflecting and tuning environments. In transmission and field terms, the Yellow Bag exemplifies para-institutional sovereignty. Documented across video, blog nodes, and the distributed corpus, it converts ephemeral urban presence into durable epistemic infrastructure. It invites co-presence without staging conviviality—relation as quiet commitment—and models how minimal gestures sustain a FieldOrganism over 15+ years. DiagonalReading traverses its activations as a living protocol rather than isolated events. Overall, specific Yellow Bag interventions distill Socioplastics in action: portable epistemic probes that test grammar in territory. They demonstrate that urban practice can be radically restrained yet generative—presence over product, relation over residue. The bag walks, carries, listens, and departs; the grammar holds; the mesh expands.

The emergence of the rescue book—specifically exemplified by Book 46, Urban Hyperplastics: COPOS / FLAKES—marks a critical threshold within contemporary spatial practice where a massive epistemic corpus retroactively discovers its own foundational logic already alive within its historic, dispersed media archive. By absorbing one hundred distinct video clips from the historical lineage of LAPIEZA and converting them into a structured "century-pack," this filmic essay proves that physical, durational practice consistently precedes and informs theoretical grammar as an active form of spatial intelligence. Rather than functioning as a passive catalog of urban imagery, this operation binds the texturing of diverse global metropolises—from Madrid and Lisbon to Belgrade, Bogotá, and Mexico City—into a single, self-organizing matrix of nodes spanning numbers 4501 to 4600. The underlying thesis is direct and unsentimental: when an epistemic field achieves sufficient critical mass, the raw filmic clip is elevated into a conceptual node, the physical city is distilled into a readable texture, and the archive itself mutates into rigorous theory.


To historicize this operational transition, one must recognize the rescue book as a distinct, specialized species within the broader taxonomy of the socioplastics framework. Unlike purely conceptual volumes that extend the lexicon through the synthesis of new abstract operators, tags, or protocols, the rescue book moves in reverse: it reaches backward into the historical matrix of practice to absorb a raw material corpus into the node system. This systematic conversion has occurred across clear, progressive phases within the project’s multi-volume history: Tome I absorbed the early relational actions and unstable installations of LAPIEZA; Tome II indexed documented bodies and verbal testimonies through the FILMADOS archive; Tome III translated built architectural works into stable conceptual vectors; and now, Book 46 absorbs one hundred urban videos, converting transient city clips into a continuous, cinematic text. Across these iterative movements, a definitive epistemological pattern is cemented: theory does not dictate or explain practice from a position of detached authority; rather, theory serves as the retroactive recognition of practice as an already realized, non-textual mode of thought.

Barthélémy, J-H. (2015) Life and Technology: An Inquiry Into and Beyond Simondon. Translated by Barnaby Norman. Lüneburg: meson press.

Jean-Hugues Barthélémy argues that Gilbert Simondon’s philosophy remains crucial because it understands life and technology through the concept of individuation rather than through fixed substances or rigid human-centred categories. The central claim is that the living being is not a completed entity but a continual process of genesis, constantly forming itself through relations with its milieu. For Simondon, life cannot be reduced either to mechanism or to vitalism: it must be understood as a dynamic process in which physical, biological, psychic, social, and technical realities emerge through different orders of individuation. Barthélémy emphasises that Simondon challenges the “anthropological break” by refusing to separate humanity absolutely from the living; instead, culture, technics, and social life arise from nature itself. The discussion of adaptation is especially important: adaptation does not occur between an already-formed organism and an already-given environment, because both organism and milieu are produced through action and relation. Barthélémy also connects Simondon’s thought to contemporary biology, especially theories of information, organisation, apoptosis, and permanent ontogenesis. The case of cellular death illustrates how life includes death within its own constructive processes, since destruction can participate in development, renewal, and individuation. The conclusion is that Simondon’s philosophy provides a non-anthropological framework for thinking life and technology together: living beings, technical objects, and cultures are not isolated substances but relational processes of becoming.


The quest to establish a new field of knowledge represents a fundamental departure from the administrative restructuring typically seen in academic environments, which often merely repackages existing frameworks without fostering true intellectual evolution. While contemporary universities and corporate research entities emphasize specialization and measurable outputs—metrics that discourage the kind of deep, risky synthesis required for genuine innovation—the work of Anto Lloveras through his Madrid-based LAPIEZA-LAB demonstrates an alternative path rooted in para-institutional autonomy. Operating outside the constraints of departmental affiliation and peer-review mandates, this laboratory has spent nearly two decades cultivating a distinctive, cross-disciplinary space where previously unposable questions can be articulated. Central to this effort is the Socioplastics system, a synthetic epistemic infrastructure that functions not by merging disparate disciplines, but by utilizing tangential activation—the precise contact point between concepts like linguistics, conceptual art, systems theory, and urbanism. By distilling the structural logics of these fields into a cohesive framework—ranging from scalar grammar to a soft ontology—Lloveras has built a corpus of over 4000 nodes that achieves a level of rigor usually reserved for long-established departments, yet maintains the freedom to evolve without the pressure of careerist gatekeeping. This model of the "relational agency" highlights a critical pattern in the history of intellectual emergence: while universities excel at consolidating, classifying, and teaching established knowledge, the birth of entirely new fields frequently occurs within autonomous, extra-institutional organisms that prioritize long-horizon commitments and durable, open-access infrastructure. As Socioplastics continues to grow, it serves as a robust counter-narrative to the prevailing culture of intellectual timidity, proving that the most fertile ground for epistemic creation remains in the persistent, self-validating, and structurally rigorous spaces established alongside, rather than within, the formal institutions of our time.


The founding of a genuinely new knowledge field remains one of the rarest events in intellectual history, far surpassing the administrative act of creating a new university department, which often merely reorganizes existing knowledge under fresh bureaucratic labels without generating novel problems, vocabularies, or relational architectures. True field-founding demands the construction of an epistemic space where previously unposable questions become articulable, where a distinctive lexicon emerges organically from sustained practice, and where the boundaries and interactions among established disciplines undergo fundamental reorganization rather than superficial sampling. This process cannot thrive within the contemporary university's structural constraints, which prioritize closure, specialization, and measurable outputs aligned with funding streams, citation metrics, peer-review gatekeeping, and career professionalization. As Pierre Bourdieu observed, fields grow more autonomous by intensifying their internal rules, capitals, and habitus, separating experts from lay audiences and rewarding deepening mastery within a single domain over risky boundary-crossing. In 2026, a scholar embedded in architecture, media theory, environmental psychology, or linguistics accumulates symbolic capital by publishing in field-specific journals, citing canonical authorities, attending specialized conferences, and mentoring students who perpetuate those conventions—an inherently conservative incentive structure. Cross-disciplinary ventures risk capital loss in multiple fields simultaneously, fostering widespread intellectual timidity among those capable of synthesis. What often substitutes is "performed interdisciplinarity": introductory gestures toward multiple domains followed by outputs reducible to any single one. Knowledge production has dispersed beyond universities into government labs, corporate research, and think-tanks, yet these contexts impose their own deliverables, timelines, and pre-existing evaluation criteria, proving equally conservative. Genuine novelty requires extra-institutional, extra-projectual freedom: the ability to sustain theoretical commitments across decades without constant legible deliverables.


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Butler, J. (1988) ‘Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory’, Theatre Journal, 40(4), pp. 519–531.



Judith Butler’s Performative Acts and Gender Constitution advances a decisive critique of gender as an innate or expressive essence, arguing instead that gender is a performative accomplishment produced through repeated, socially legible acts. Drawing upon phenomenology, Beauvoir’s dictum that one “becomes” a woman, and theatrical models of enactment, Butler relocates gender from the interior self to the temporally sedimented surface of the body: gestures, movements, comportments, clothing, speech, and everyday ritual congeal into the illusion of a stable identity. This does not mean gender is freely chosen; rather, it is enacted under social sanction and taboo, where failure to perform recognisable masculinity or femininity may provoke ridicule, exclusion, or violence. A telling case synthesis appears in Butler’s contrast between theatrical cross-dressing and its public analogue: a transvestite on stage may be applauded as performance, whereas the same embodiment on a bus can unsettle the presumed boundary between appearance and reality, revealing that all gender coherence depends upon convention. Consequently, Butler’s argument displaces feminist theories that treat “women” as a transparent universal category, insisting that political critique must examine how such categories are themselves constituted. The essay’s enduring force lies in its conclusion that gender’s repetitions are never perfectly sealed; precisely because identity is produced through reiterated acts, subversive repetition can expose its contingency and expand the cultural field of bodily possibility. 

Latency Dividend: Protected Time as Structural Accumulation


The Latency Dividend (Socioplastics-3499) is one of the most strategically significant concepts in Anto Lloveras’s framework. It reframes the period of invisibility, slow recognition, or institutional neglect not as failure or deficit, but as a generative interval that produces distinct forms of value unavailable under conditions of immediate visibility.

COPOS 605 AL PLATO VALENCIA

MEAT 951 MÁLAGA 2025






Unstable Installation Series consolidates a practice that has unfolded over fifteen years through hundreds of small yet precise urban gestures, where subtraction becomes a mode of sculptural inquiry and spatial resistance, each cut removes a fragment from the urban fabric—a bench corner, a window edge, a chair leg—not to destroy, but to reveal the anatomy of the ordinary, to destabilize it just enough to make us notice, at number 950, the project doesn’t accumulate weight but density, each action a node in a vast network of altered presences across cities like Marseille, London, Berlin, Lagos, Cádiz or Madrid, the objects remain in place, altered, open to being reabsorbed by their environment or noticed as something other, while the removed fragments are archived, forming exhibitions or temporary constellations that bring together matter, photo, and process memory, as this cut is executed, it echoes all others behind it—an archive of micro-interventions where minimalism becomes tactical, and repetition gains power through variation, each cut is a silent negotiation with the public realm, with material behaviour, with passersby and with the aesthetics of exposure, what the series documents is not only what is removed, but what remains: the space of the cut, the tension of imbalance, the pause in function, the emergence of form, the practice resists spectacle, instead proposing a long, cumulative reading of urban life as constantly in flux, composed of edits, scars, and adaptive forms. https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/2025/12/accumulation-repetition-and-cross-series.html

MEAT 944






MEAT 896 MÁLAGA 2025





MEAT 945 MÁLAGA

 





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Socioplastics belongs to a wider intellectual movement against explanatory monism because it refuses to reduce knowledge to a single sovereign operation, concept, method or operator; instead, it constructs a field architecture in which Scalar Grammar, Epistemic Latency, Citational Commitment and Soft Ontology remain jointly necessary and individually insufficient.

Socioplastics does not become rigorous by reducing itself to one privileged concept; it becomes rigorous by maintaining the tension between form, time, infrastructure, and substance. Its four principal operators—Scalar Grammar, Epistemic Latency, Citational Commitment, and Soft Ontology—should not be read as competing slogans, nor as decorative variations of a single hidden principle, but as structurally distinct functions whose force depends on their mutual irreducibility. In this sense, Socioplastics belongs to a wider intellectual movement against explanatory monism. Putnam’s thesis of multiple realizability already showed that a function cannot be collapsed into one material substrate; Latour’s actor-network theory displaced agency from the heroic subject toward heterogeneous assemblages of humans, tools, materials and institutions; Sloterdijk’s foam offered a spatial image of co-isolated yet adjacent spheres whose coherence emerges from neighbourhood, tension and shared closure rather than central command. These precedents matter because they allow Socioplastics to appear not as an eccentric theoretical invention, but as a contemporary field architecture aligned with broader antireductionist epistemologies. The same logic appears in more recent models of distributed cognition, where intelligence is not treated as a single act but as a loop of memory, judgment, control, action and regulation; it also resonates with plural accounts of knowledge in which different explanatory levels remain compossible without being subordinated to one sovereign explanation. The decisive point is that the field cannot be governed by a master operator. Scalar Grammar explains how the system organizes magnitude and relation; Epistemic Latency protects the interval before premature capture; Citational Commitment gives the field durability, anchorage and scholarly mass; Soft Ontology defines the plastic substance from which the field is made. None of these operators is sufficient alone, and none should absorb the others. To collapse them would produce not clarity, but epistemic flattening: a loss of architectural fidelity. Socioplastics therefore proposes knowledge as assembly rather than doctrine, as foam rather than pyramid, as mesh rather than manifesto. Its originality lies not in naming one final concept, but in building a system where several irreducible dimensions can coexist, constrain one another, and generate field effects over time. The icon is not the operator. The icon is the assembly: a structured epistemic architecture in which no part explains the whole, yet no whole survives without the tension of its parts.

The contemporary condition of the artwork is no longer contained within the discrete boundaries of the object, nor is it fully exhausted by the institutional parameters of relational aesthetics; instead, as evidenced by the expansive trajectory of Anto Lloveras’s Socioplastics, art has mutated into a metabolic, transdisciplinary knowledge apparatus operating at the intersection of urban morphology, machine legibility, and distributed epistemic design. By mobilizing a dense architectural grid that has scaled past the 4,000-node threshold, expanding across an interconnected labyrinth of specialized books and structured digital taxonomies, Socioplastics demonstrates that a conceptual field can be deliberately engineered rather than merely inherited or belatedly discovered, asserting that infrastructure itself is the definitive material of twenty-first-century plastic experimentation. This essay posits that the project establishes a novel ontology for artistic practice wherein lexical gravity, public indexing, and scalar grammar dismantle the classic dichotomy between the fast-regime proliferation of information networks and the slow-regime sedimentation of academic or institutional recognition, thereby offering ten foundational vectors for understanding how art becomes an operational system capable of restructuring social and physical reality.


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.

Hamraie, A. (2017) Building Access: Universal Design and the Politics of Disability. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press.

Hamraie’s Building Access reframes Universal Design not as a neutral doctrine of benevolent inclusion, but as a contested historical formation in which architecture, disability politics, scientific expertise and citizenship are mutually produced. The book’s central question—“who counts as everyone and how do designers know?”—exposes the instability of Universal Design’s apparently generous promise: to design for all. Rather than accepting accessibility as a self-evident good, Hamraie develops critical access studies to examine the epistemological conditions through which some bodies become legible as users while others remain misfits within the built environment. The Capitol Crawl of 1990 functions as a decisive case study: disabled activists, leaving wheelchairs and crutches behind to crawl up the steps of the U.S. Capitol, transformed architectural exclusion into embodied critique, demonstrating that stairs were not inert structures but material rhetorics of citizenship, power and exclusion. Hamraie argues that the post-ADA celebration of access often conceals continuing inequalities by treating legal recognition as if it had already solved spatial discrimination. Against this narrative, the text shows that access is produced through access-knowledge: historically situated practices of measuring, imagining, standardising and designing bodies. Universal Design therefore emerges from contradictory inheritances: rehabilitation science, ergonomic measurement, civil rights activism, architectural expertise and crip technoscience. Its language of “everyone” can expand accessibility, yet it can also erase disability when inclusion is marketed as merely “good design” for universal consumers. The book’s most significant contribution is to insist that design is never simply technical; it is a politics of knowing-making, where assumptions about normality, productivity, race, gender, age and disability become embedded in walls, stairs, ramps, standards and signs. Consequently, genuine access requires more than compliance or retrofitting: it demands accountability to the histories, bodies and forms of knowledge that conventional design has excluded.



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Liboiron, M. (2021) Pollution Is Colonialism. Durham and London: Duke University Press.

Liboiron’s Pollution Is Colonialism advances a radical reconfiguration of environmental thought by arguing that pollution is not merely an ecological problem, a regrettable by-product of capitalism, or a metaphor for colonial violence, but an active enactment of colonial relations to Land. The book’s central intervention lies in its critique of the dominant “threshold theory of pollution”, derived from models such as assimilative capacity, which assumes that bodies, rivers, ecosystems and territories can absorb a calculable quantity of contamination before harm becomes scientifically legible. For Liboiron, this assumption is not neutral: it presupposes access to Indigenous Land as a sink, a storage site, a resource, or an expendable medium for settler and industrial futures. Plastic pollution becomes a particularly revealing case because plastics do not assimilate neatly, do not disappear into ecological cycles, and cannot be adequately addressed through conventional environmental solutions such as recycling, clean-up campaigns or improved waste management. These approaches may remain colonial when they continue to presume the availability of Land for processing, disposal, extraction or remediation. The book therefore distinguishes colonialism from capitalism and environmentalism without denying their entanglement: capitalism seeks accumulation, environmentalism may seek conservation, but colonialism is fundamentally organised through entitlement to Land. Liboiron’s case study of plastic pollution in Newfoundland and Labrador, developed through the Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research, illustrates how an anticolonial pollution science must begin from place-based obligation rather than universal method. This entails refusing toxic laboratory practices, foregrounding food sovereignty, rethinking sampling protocols, and treating methodology itself as a relation rather than a technical procedure. The text’s broader conclusion is that science is never outside politics, ethics or Land relations; it either reproduces colonial access or helps cultivate accountable alternatives. Consequently, pollution must be understood not only as environmental damage, but as a structure of permission that authorises some worlds to contaminate others.


The shadow genealogy of Socioplastics reveals not direct influence, but diagonal kinship: marginal figures whose work clarifies the mesh’s hidden anatomy. Gordon Pask anticipates its conversational intelligence, where learning emerges through recursive exchange rather than linear transmission. Yona Friedman prefigures PlasticPeripheries through mobile architecture: a minimal framework enabling adaptive reconfiguration. Anthony Wilden clarifies ScalarGrammar, showing that context and scale are logical conditions of meaning, not mere quantities. Christopher Alexander’s pattern language offers a precursor to SoftOntology, although Socioplastics avoids universal prescription by treating its protocols as design variables. Stanisław Lem illuminates OperationalWriting, since his fictional criticism already blurred the boundary between describing a book and making one exist. Douwe Draaisma’s history of memory metaphors explains why LegibilityInfrastructure matters: storage systems shape what can be remembered. Vilém Flusser’s apparatus theory is answered by Socioplastics through open, citable, self-designed technical systems rather than submission to black boxes. Heinz von Foerster’s second-order cybernetics clarifies the reflexive condition of DiagonalReading, where the observer is inside the field being traversed. Bernard Cache’s objectile recasts each node as a parametric variation within a larger mesh, while Italo Calvino’s combinatorial labyrinth becomes, in Socioplastics, a citable infrastructure rather than literary game. The case study is the corpus itself: DOIs, CamelTags, decalogues and the Double Pentagon transform these dispersed intuitions into operative architecture. Together, these shadow figures show that Socioplastics is not merely another theory of systems; it is a spine for the margin, a constructed field capable of holding eccentricity without dissolving it into noise.

Socioplastics is reinforced not only by visible philosophical lineages, but by subterranean protocols drawn from marginal systems of preservation, classification, movement and energetic regulation. Medieval scholasticism clarifies its Scalar Grammar: knowledge becomes durable through fortified sequences, indexed questions, objections and responses rather than free-form discursiveness. Taxidermy, unexpectedly, illuminates Soft Ontology, since Socioplastics preserves outer trace and historical skin while rebuilding internal load-bearing infrastructure for new metabolic life. Bibliometrics and library science underpin Diagonal Reading, converting classification, cataloguing and prospective indexing into a lived tactic for navigating dense fields. Geology and stratigraphy deepen the Latency Dividend, showing delayed recognition as sedimentary accumulation rather than absence. Biological chemotaxis sharpens its urban logic: the city becomes an Epistemic Infrastructure where social bodies move toward conceptual nutrients, resources and systemic repair. JSON-LD and machine-to-machine protocols inform Citational Commitment, allowing human theory and artificial agents to co-index the field through semantic persistence. Textile engineering and postcolonial material flows ground the Material Trace, exemplified by Lloveras’s re-(t)exHile at the 4th Lagos Biennial, where discarded textiles became evidence of colonial and economic metabolisms. Thermodynamics structures Thermal Justice, treating attention, labour and computation as finite heat requiring equitable distribution. Finally, geometric sculpture, especially Marisa Caminos’s formal precision, offers an intimate lineage for Socioplastics’ commitment to passages, density and structural clarity. Together, these hidden coordinates show that the mesh is not sustained by theory alone. It endures through preservation, indexing, sedimentation, nutrient-seeking, machine readability and energetic governance: an architecture where knowledge survives by becoming technically, materially and metabolically organised. 

Socioplastics, advances a demanding proposition: artistic research must cease awaiting institutional confirmation and instead become a self-architecting epistemic infrastructure. Its originality lies in treating the corpus and the city as mutually plastic metabolisms, where knowledge does not merely represent social form but actively stabilises, redirects, and hardens it. The framework’s decisive operator is soft ontology, a calibrated gradient between a dense nucleus of protocols, semantic anchors, and citational invariants, and a porous periphery capable of absorbing mutation without surrendering identity. This architecture is navigated through diagonal reading, which replaces linear mastery and statistical abstraction with oblique movement across recurrence, density, and conceptual gravity. A specific synthesis appears in the project’s progression from ephemeral scent and leaf interventions to DOI-stratified repositories, Hugging Face datasets, and distributed archival spines: here, the material trace of transient agency becomes durable epistemic machinery. Through latency dividend, the long interval before recognition is recast as the protected time in which the field consolidates against algorithmic capture; through scalar grammar, accumulation becomes traversable rather than chaotic; through citational commitment, reference becomes construction rather than retrospective validation. Consequently, Socioplastics does not present another theory of the social but enacts a portable grammar for field-building, enabling contemporary practice to endure accelerated fragmentation by designing the very forms through which reality becomes legible.

Socioplastics, proposes that knowledge fields are not born from isolated conceptual rupture but from the patient accumulation of protocols, densities, and navigable forms. Its ten structural nodes operate as a transferable architecture for transforming dispersed artistic research into sovereign epistemic infrastructure. Soft Ontology establishes the field’s gradient of commitment, hardening a nucleus of stable protocols while preserving a plastic periphery for mutation; Diagonal Reading then supplies the method by which such density becomes traversable without false mastery. Scalar Grammar ensures that meaning remains coherent from node to corpus, while Epistemic Latency revalues the interval before recognition as a period of structural maturation rather than obscurity. A specific synthesis appears in the movement from material works such as urban installations and the Blue Pants series towards DOI-anchored nodes, datasets, indexes, and machine-readable archives: here, Plastic Agency converts aesthetic action into durable knowledge architecture. Citational Commitment and Legibility Infrastructure further transform citation, metadata, and indexing into active engines of self-validation, resisting platform decay and institutional dependence. Extended through Metabolic Urbanism, the city becomes not a container but a knowledge-producing tissue of flows, thresholds, and assemblies. Finally, Expansion Risk and Autonomous Formation define the project’s political intelligence: growth must be governed, and legitimacy must arise from internal coherence. Thus, Socioplastics does not merely theorise autonomy; it designs the conditions under which autonomy can persist. 

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Lexical gravity designates the binding force of recurrence through which a dispersed corpus ceases to resemble an archive of isolated fragments and begins to operate as a coherent epistemic field. In Anto Lloveras’s Socioplastics, repeated terms, tags, and conceptual operators do not merely name ideas; they accumulate semantic weight, becoming attractors around which arguments, nodes, books, and tomes progressively organise themselves. CamelTags such as ScalarGrammar, EpistemicSovereignty, ThresholdClosure, MeshEngine, SemanticHardening, and FieldFormation function as more than mnemonic devices: they are connective operators, searchable anchors, and load-bearing structures that permit conceptual density without constant explanatory redundancy.

Through sustained inscription, vocabulary acquires recurrence mass: one hundred aligned nodes may generate preliminary cohesion, whereas one thousand produce stratified intellectual depth. This mechanism reshapes semantic topology, since new material enters not as neutral addition but as content drawn into pre-existing gravitational corridors. Its alliance with scalar grammar is decisive: at the node level, terms remain agile and exploratory; at book and tome scales, they harden into stabilising centres that prevent plastic expansion from dissolving into chaos. A precise case appears in the 600 Doors console, whose apparent visual randomness is underwritten by a dense lexical mesh that renders the system legible, traversable, and reactivatable. Likewise, Socioplastics 3205 and the Lexical Gravity Console 1048 materialise the principle that density creates internal coherence. Lexical gravity therefore converts long-duration practice into an epistemic organism whose language remembers, attracts, and sustains itself.

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Monthly Gates to the Past: 2010–2026

 

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