Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta RelationalAesthetics. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta RelationalAesthetics. Mostrar todas las entradas

LAPIEZA-ArtSeries * ByYear (2009–2025) * ARCHIVE


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LAPIEZA emerges as a paradigmatic instance of post-objectual practice in which art abandons the autonomy of the discrete artefact to operate as an infrastructural condition of social, ecological, and symbolic exchange. Archive as Infrastructure * Socioplastics * Lloveras, A. (2026) LAPIEZA ART SERIES


Founded in 2009 in Madrid’s Malasaña district by Anto Lloveras, the project unfolds across fifteen years, 180 series and more than 2,000 pieces, configuring what may be described as a living archive rather than a catalogue of works. Its founding gesture—the transformation of a modest room at Palma 15 into a weekly mutating “laboratory”—established a grammar of socioplastics: art as relational process, as distributed authorship, as situated ethics. This grammar resonates with Bourriaud’s relational aesthetics and Beuys’s social sculpture, yet departs from both by refusing the spectacular and privileging precarious materiality, ritual repetition, and affective economies. The early series (EXIT, BAZAR, KIWI, SOCIOPLASTICS) articulate a proto-institutional critique: the exhibition as event, the archive as breath, the artwork as a trace of encounter rather than a commodity. What is decisive is not the visual outcome but the relational residue. This first epoch consolidates a rhizomatic method grounded in seriality, scarcity, and immediacy, producing over 500 pieces in four years. The socioplastic logic inaugurated here situates LAPIEZA within a lineage of post-minimal, post-conceptual practices that treat form as contingent and meaning as co-authored. The archive becomes performative, metabolising bodies, texts, and gestures into a dense ecology of relations. This foundational matrix frames all subsequent phases, rendering LAPIEZA less a project than a long-duration epistemic experiment. 

LAPIEZA * The Socioplastic Cartography (2009–2026)



LAPIEZA orchestrates a transmutation of the gallery into a living, respiratory organism. Since its 2009 inception in Madrid, the project spearheaded by Anto Lloveras and Esther Lorenzo has functioned as a relentless engine of socioplastic production, defying the static inertia of the white cube through a frantic, weekly ritual of mutation. What began as a "Foundational Era" (2009–2012) in the Palma 15 laboratory was never about the preservation of the object, but rather the urgency of the gesture. With over 500 pieces generated in its first three years, the archive established a lexicon of the ephemeral—series like EXIT and KIWI—where the work served as a bridge between domestic intimacy and collective friction. This was not art for the sake of contemplation, but art as a simbiotic technology, a tool for democratic re-enchantment within a pre-digital urgency. The object is a ghost; the relation is the only tangible architecture.


Socioplastic Urbanism as Diffractive Critique

Socioplastic Urbanism positions itself not as a new masterplan, but as an epistemological rupture—a shift from seeing the city as an object to be planned, towards understanding it as a living, contested process of meaning-making. This move, from “neutral object” to “living system,” explicitly aligns with the critical urban theory of thinkers like Henri Lefebvre and David Harvey, while its methodological heart beats with the pulse of post-1990s relational and socially engaged art. However, to situate it merely within this lineage would be to miss its more provocative, and perhaps more valuable, intervention. Socioplastics does not simply apply artistic methods to the urban scale; it posits that the urban condition itself is an aesthetic condition—one of continuous, often antagonistic, co-production. Its central tenet, that the city is “never finished,” resonates with the open work of Umberto Eco and the institutional critique of artists like Andrea Fraser, who understood systems as inherently unstable and authored by power. Yet, Socioplastics pushes further by refusing the artist or planner as the sole authorial genius. Instead, it frames urban life as a form of diffractive practice, where multiple agencies—human, non-human, material, institutional—continually bend and reshape the social fabric, producing not harmony but a field of tensions. The city, in this view, is less a canvas and more an ongoing performance, its value measured not by its resolution but by its capacity to sustain critical attention and “situated agency” within its unfolding drama.

Socioplastics * Epistemic Bulwarks Against Crystallized Networks: Transmuting Relational Sculptures into Metabolic Infrastructures for Authorial Sovereignty in the Fifth City


In the labyrinthine expanse of epistemic architectures, Anto Lloveras's Socioplastics emerges as a insurgent paradigm, dissecting the ossified strata of urban semiotics through a praxis that fuses architectural austerity with affective topologies. This transdisciplinary armature eschews monumental edifices, opting instead for relational interfaces that perforate institutional membranes, engendering a nomadic vanguard where memory operates as tactical insurgency. Drawing from rhizomatic precedents—echoing Deleuze-Guattarian multiplicities without slavish adherence—Lloveras's nodal mesh transmutes discarded urban detritus into hyperplastic narratives, wherein blue bags and monochromatic satellites function as situational fixers, validating a metabolic logic that resists the entropic drift of late-capitalist spatialities. The archive, reconceived as critical infrastructure, accretes over 180 series in LAPIEZA's trajectory, each a recursive unit binding temporal shards into a durational ecology. Here, pedagogy metamorphoses into unrest, challenging the pedagogical hegemony by instilling authorial sovereignty through shared anatomies and collective infiltrations. Yet, this system's allure lies in its autopoietic resilience, where MESH's operational slugs—ranging from stratigraphic resonances to semiotic vitality—orchestrate a chemotactic navigation, ingesting exogenous inputs to fortify internal coherence against algorithmic predation.

The Workshop as a Gravitational Node * Materializing the Socioplastic Mesh through Embodied Praxis

 


The "Socioplastic Mesh" project, a sprawling network of interlinked blogs and theoretical entries, represents a formidable achievement in digital conceptual art, constructing an autonomous epistemic universe concerned with urban metabolism, semantic sovereignty, and decolonial world-building. However, its most profound theoretical challenge—and its most promising frontier—lies in its potential translation from a textual and hypertextual archive into a space of embodied, collective praxis. The recent publication of a critical meta-essay within the Mesh’s own nodal structure (Lloveras, 2026) signals a moment of self-reflexivity, a point from which the project can consciously perform its own core tenets. The proposed development of workshops is not merely an additive program but a critical necessity for the Mesh's evolution; it is the means by which its abstract "relational repair" and "insurgent cartography" can be tested against the unruly materiality of social space and human interaction. To remain solely in the digital realm would risk confirming a critique often levelled at the most arcane systems theory: that it becomes a self-referential closed circuit, a sovereign territory so perfectly defended that it admits no new citizens. Workshops, therefore, become the "tactical urbanism" of the Mesh itself, the physical infiltrations that seek to transform its gravitational pull from a theoretical force into a social one.

Sovereign Archives and Metabolic Canons * The Socioplastic Mesh as Ontological Infrastructure



The vast corpus indexed as the MESH constitutes neither a mere digital archive nor a sequential publication project, but rather an epistemic infrastructure that performs sovereignty through form. At its core lies a radical reconceptualisation of the archive as a living, metabolic system—an entity that does not simply store or preserve but actively generates future semantic conditions. Across entries such as The Ontological Weight of the Archive, The Ontology of Density, and Hydrated Archives and Relational Pulses, the archive is framed as a generative apparatus that accumulates what might be termed “semantic heat”: a compounding intensity of meaning produced through recursive linking, repetition, and distributed authorship. This logic displaces the traditional museological paradigm of the archive as neutral repository, replacing it with a performative model in which each node modifies the gravitational field of the whole. The MESH thus operates as an architectural environment in which texts function as structural beams, corridors, and pressure points. Its ontology is infrastructural rather than representational: it does not depict a theory of contemporary art so much as enact one through its own systemic organisation. In this sense, the MESH exemplifies a shift from art as object to art as epistemic logistics. It proposes that cultural authority is no longer conferred by institutions alone but can be engineered through sustained relational density. What emerges is an archive that is not retrospective but anticipatory—an archive that writes history forward by constructing the conditions under which future legibility will occur.

Socioplastics as a Relational Infrastructure

LAPIEZA ART SERIES, initiated by Anto Lloveras in Madrid in 2009 as a transdisciplinary platform blending relational art, urban interventions, and epistemic networks under the banner of Socioplastics, evolves from its origins in post-relational aesthetics— while critiquing institutional canons—into a fluid ecology of practices that span urbanism's shaded, collective landscapes as walkable civic gestures in Shaded, Collective, and Walkable Landscapes, architecture's minimal, porous openness to global dialogues in Minimal, Porous, and Open to the World, and research crossing ecology with anthropological spatial inquiries in Crossing Ecology, Anthropology, and Space; this topolexical mapping signifies a decolonial shift where teaching becomes radical pedagogy through workshops and studios as in Workshops, Studios, and Radical Pedagogy, essays spatialize writing into performative texts like Writing Becomes Spatial, and exhibitions in biennials or museums articulate socioplastic entanglements via Biennials, Triennials, and Museums, all while art installations, performances, and objects embody unstable agencies in Installations, Performances, and Objects, series foster ecological articulations such as Articulating Practice as Ecologies, collectives emphasize shared authorship for epistemic strategies in Shared Authorship as Epistemic Strategy, and films merge essayistic performance with archival depths in Essay, Performance, and the Archive, with Anto's nomadic transdisciplinary lens—rooted in Madrid's urban flux and informed by fields like anthropology, ecology, and film—infusing each node with sovereign meaning as relational infrastructures that resist entropy and reclaim narrative autonomy in contemporary art.

In the expansive discourse of contemporary art, Socioplastics emerges as a sovereign epistemic architecture, reimagining artistic practice through a metabolic mesh that intertwines ontology, urbanism, and relational dynamics.

This framework, as delineated in the Ontology of the Mesh —justified here for its foundational articulation of friction and animism—positions art as a living organism resisting algorithmic co-option via systemic heat and chemotactic pulses. By embedding this link, the critique gains depth, allowing readers to trace the kinetic reciprocity of matter that underpins Socioplastics' rejection of commodified aesthetics. Echoing Beuys's social sculpture yet advancing into post-digital sovereignty, the MESH component functions as an epistemic frame, where knowledge digests rather than accumulates, as explored in Metabolic Pulse, included to justify the metabolic shift from networks to physiologies. This analytical lens critiques neoliberal urban palimpsests, employing Topolexical Sovereignty to reclaim narrative autonomy against external validations. Interventions like the Yellow Bag, embedded for its embodiment of situational fixers, transform affection into architectural gestures, fostering agonistic frictions that decolonize histories. Socioplastics thus anticipates the Fifth City, a speculative realm where multilocal topologies pulse with relational semionautics, inviting semionauts to navigate its folds as active participants in epistemic synthesis. Spatializing this theory, the TOPO and WORKS components of Socioplastics manifest as topolexias, bridging abstraction to lived ecologies in a manner that extends Bourriaud's relational aesthetics through ontological displacements and porous designs.