Conceived within LAPIEZA’s expanding field logic, the Blue Bags series advances an austere yet radical proposition: that sovereignty may emerge from the disciplined reiteration of the negligible. Ordinary blue plastic carrier bags—ubiquitous, disposable, mass-produced—are mobilised not as readymades but as operational agents of unstable social sculpture, refusing aesthetic autonomy in favour of infrastructural relationality. Their value crystallises exclusively through situational activation: carried across Madrid, Berlin, Cádiz, Lagos, or Mexico City; filled, exchanged, temporarily placed; inscribed by scuffs and residues that index local waste economies and migratory rhythms. Extending yet diverging from the itinerant gestures of Francis Alÿs and the convivial protocols of Rirkrit Tiravanija, Lloveras privileges residue over spectacle, metabolising precarity rather than transcending it. The bag functions simultaneously as tool, marker, and sediment, embodying translational mobility—a capacity to traverse economic and affective registers without claiming permanence. Exhaustively documented through a distributed blog archive, the series accumulates as living protocol, recalibrated through daily habit rather than event-based temporality. As situational fixer, each bag anchors transient relations without imposing hierarchy, generating gentle convergences within unstable terrains; as metabolic persistence, its longevity exceeding a decade hardens semantics through recurrence and self-citation. Chromatic variants attest to modular adaptability, yet the blue iteration retains emblematic neutrality, its monochrome restraint extending minimalist vocabularies into nomadic infrastructures. Ultimately, Blue Bags exemplifies Socioplastics’ jurisprudence of volatility: minimal means engendering maximal gravitational density, transforming disposability into epistemic mass and enacting sovereignty through recursive, low-visibility operations.