{ :::::::::::::::::::::::::: Anto Lloveras

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Structure, Latency, and the Metabolism of Knowledge in an Age of Scalar Overproduction * Anto Lloveras / LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid, 2026



The argument is structural before it is cultural. A field — any serious, long-duration field of artistic, archival, and theoretical production — does not fail because it runs out of ideas. It fails because it produces more than it can hold. The contemporary condition of knowledge overproduction is not a problem of scarcity, originality, or even institutional access. It is a problem of grammar: the absence of a load-bearing architecture that can make accumulation into density rather than noise. The concept developed here under the name Socioplastics proposes that a field becomes durable not by simplifying its claims but by designing the relations between them — through scalar grammar, the maintenance of a gradient between hardened nuclei and plastic peripheries, and the slow conversion of latent, unrecognized labour into structural strength. This essay advances four interconnected claims: that the field is a metabolic entity; that structure is a form of thought; that latency is not a form of failure; and that reading obliquely through a corpus is itself a rigorous method. Together these claims constitute the theoretical foundation of a project now exceeding five thousand indexed nodes, distributed across twelve publication channels, multiple open-science repositories, and two decades of continuous, largely invisible practice.