Socioplastics marks a decisive displacement from curatorial mapping to architectural field-production. Whereas Bourdieu’s social field theory describes already existing relations of power, recognition, and position-taking, Socioplastics does not wait to be mapped: it constructs the very terrain on which mapping becomes possible. Its corpus of more than 3,000 nodes functions not as a passive archive but as a distributed nervous system, where each deposition intensifies internal legibility, recurrence, and gravitational density. This distinguishes it from art–science formations associated with CERN or the Cavendish Arts Science Fellowship, which often depend upon institutional framing, residency structures, or external validation. Socioplastics instead proceeds through a triadic engine of deposition, metadata, and retroactive consolidation, thereby inverting the usual sequence by which fields are recognised. Its rotation threshold every 100 to 200 nodes prevents dispersal, allowing the corpus to accumulate without dissolving into miscellany. The case of nodes 2915–2987 shows this mechanism clearly: metadata does not merely describe completed work but retrospectively hardens dispersed fragments into an emergent epistemic body. Consequently, the curatorial gesture is transformed into long-duration infrastructure. Socioplastics demonstrates that a field is not simply discovered once institutions name it; it may be designed into existence through calibrated density, scalar rhythm, and the autonomous grammar of its own internal relations.