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Cosmic Threads
Aerocene Seoul
Worldings
Play-Ground
Complementarities
Live(s) on Air
Corona Australis 38.39
Life(s) of Webs
Cloud Cities: mise-en-Aéroscène
Tomás Saraceno in collaboration: Web(s) of Life
Crux Australis 68.0
Entangled Air
Oceans of Air
Silent Autumn
Aerocene: Free the Air. “Orbit-s” For a Post-Fossil Fuel Era
Particular Matter(s)
Inter + Play 2
Zonal Harmonic Constellation 170,000; 220,000
we do not all breathe the same air
AnarcoAracnoAnacroArcano
Du sol au soleil
Webs of Life
Museo Aero Solar: for an Aerocene era
How to hear the universe in a spider/web: A live concert for/by invertebrate rights
Life(s) of Webs, publication launch at Palazzo Ducale
Songs for the Air
Moving Atmospheres
In Conversation: Tomás Saraceno
Event Horizon
Art Collaboration Kyoto, Online Artist Talk with Tomás Saraceno
Aerocene Forum
Who qualifies as a Subject of Rights? We no longer want to be a sacrifice zone!
Reparationen und Reparatur. Über Klimagerechtigkeit, Kolonialismus und Kapitalozän
7×7 2024
Life(s) of Webs, Panel Discussion and Film Screening
Aerocircus – eine circensische karnevaleske mit planwagen entgegen aller linearitäten
“The Crisis of Relationships” Masterclass
The Climate Hub, Climate Week NYC, Panel Discussion
Infinite Ecologies Marathon: The Prelude
Towards an Ecosocial Energy Transition: A Conversation and Manifesto
BBC HARDtalk Interview
Fly with Aerocene Pacha
Matter(s) for Conversation and Action
Tomás Saraceno
Drift: A cosmic web of thermodynamic rhythms
Cloud Cities: du sol au soleil
Cloud Cities Barcelona
Silent Autumn
Nggamdu.org
Ha Chi Ki
Tomás Saraceno
Lignes de possibles: Arachnophilia with Tomás Saraceno at the Festival La Manufacture d’idées
Interspecies Conversations
ON AIR
Movement
Aerographies
The Art of Noticing – Louisiana Channel Interviews Tomás Saraceno
Avec qui venez-vous? Vinciane Despret in conversation with Tomás Saraceno
Prototype of Maratus volans (peacock spider), Web of Life (2020) | for a real Augmented Reality
Invertebrate Rights for “Down to Earth”
Radio Galena
Free the Air: Aerocene – Tomás Saraceno holds keynote speech at Herald Design Forum
Up Close: Tomás Saraceno in conversation with Harriet A. Washington
Tomás Saraceno. Aria at Cinema Odeon
Aria
More-than-humans
Cosmic Filaments
Solar Rhythms
ALBEDO
Spider/Web Pavilion 7
Arachnomancy Cards
Acqua Alta: en Clave de Sol
On the Disappearance of Clouds
Arachnophilia Community Meeting with MIT Professor Markus J Buehler
Sundial for Spatial Echoes
Tomás Saraceno at the Venice Biennale 2019
2-Dimensional Webs Archive/Maps and Traces
Entangled Orbits
Gravitational Waves
Event Horizon
A Thermodynamic Imaginary
Beyond the Cradle 2019: Space and the Arts
Engadin Art Talks: Grace and Gravity
Art Basel Miami – Albedo | Hans Ulrich Obrist in conversation with Tomás Saraceno
Solar Bell Ensemble
How to entangle the universe in a spider/web?
Printed Matter(s)
Webs of At-tent(s)ion
“ON AIR live with…”
Many suns and worlds
The Politics of Solar Rhythms: Cosmic Levitation
Living at the bottom of the ocean of air
Sounding the Air
Spider/Web Oracle Readings Program
Algo-r(h)i(y)thms
163,000 Light Years
Passages of Time
Particular Matter(s) Jam Session
Our Interplanetary Bodies
How to Entangle the Universe in a Spider Web
Aerocene at the Antarctic Biennale
Aerosolar Journeys
Dark Cosmic Web
Stillness in Motion — Cloud Cities
Cloud Cities
Cloud City
Hybrid solitary… semi-social quintet… on cosmic webs…
Cosmic Jive: The Spider Sessions
Becoming Aerosolar
Hybrid Webs
Irisdescent Planet
Arachnid Orchestra. Jam Sessions
Solar Bell
Ring Bell — Solar Orchestra and the Wind Structures
On the Roof: Cloud City
On Space Time Foam
Air-Port-City/Cloud Cities
Cloudy Dunes. When Friedman Meets Bucky on Air-Port-City
Cloud-Specific
Tomás Saraceno’s Cloud Cities and Solar Balloon Travel – Interview with The Creators Project
14 Billions (Working Title)
Moving Beyond Materiality – MIT Visiting Artist Tomás Saraceno
Observatory, Air-Port-City
In Orbit
Aerocene at COP21
Cloud Cities Connectome
From Camogli to San Felipe, spiders weaving stars…
Galaxies Forming along Filaments, like Droplets along the Strands of a Spider’s Web
Biospheres
Cloudy House
Lighter than Air
Microscale, Macroscale, and Beyond: Large-Scale Implications of Small-Scale Experiments
Poetic Cosmos of the Breath
Cumulonimbus/Air-Port-City
Cumulus
From Camogli to San Felipe,
spiders weaving stars…
13.05–13.06.2010
Fondazione Pier Luigi e Natalina Remotti
Camogli, Italy
From Camogli to San Felipe, spiders weaving stars… offers a view of the spider/web and its capacity to cross enormous distances dangling on strands of silk.
To understand Saraceno’s visions it is important to touch base with the English scientists of Rothamsted Research, who have developed a mathematical model to describe the phenomenon of the flight of arachnids known as “ballooning.” The model shows that air turbulence can transport them hundreds of kilometers out to sea. Most spiders in search of new territory, or a mate, cast their silk into the air and can thus “parachute” to a new location. The main seasons of this activity are fall and spring. Normally they migrate from one side of a field to another, but at times they can cover great distances. For twenty years the best mathematical description of the ballooning phenomenon was the so-called Humphrey model, but the Rothamsted researchers say it did not explain certain characteristics of the flight of spiders moving in air flows. In short, it treated the silk as if it were a stiff rod, and the spiders as if they were just dangling from the bottom end, like a sort of “upside-down lollipop.”
Instead, their flexibility permits the filaments suspended in the wind to twist with the turbulence, which alters the aerodynamic characteristics and allows the spiders to travel for unpredictable distances. Understanding how and why they move may help us to use spiders as biological control agents against agricultural pests.
This research prompted Saraceno, in the spring of 2009, to conduct a “ballooning” experiment in Argentina, flying some objects covered with helium-filled acrylic film. Another step with respect to his utopian habitat structures (Air-Port-City) that dialogue with the constellations and the research of architects like Richard Buckminster Fuller, Peter Cook, and Yona Friedman.
In the exhibition at Fondazione Pier Luigi e Natalina Remotti, Tomas Saraceno proposes a synthesis between the images from the Argentine experiment and the bubble-cockpits for spiders seen in Venice. Along different trajectories, four bubbles cross the two levels of the building, while the strands that support them seem to be energy vectors that could ideally make the building itself lift off, if we imagine them being unfastened.
In the flight photographs shown on the walls of the second floor, the structures at times take on the physiognomy of large drops of water vapor condensing in the sky, and at times seem like physiological entities that float at the edge of the horizon. In other cases, they take on the form of a tent. The photographs document the effective possibility of an airborne architecture, but also a poetic and intellectual tension, to imagine a more evanescent concept of human habitation. Forty years after man landed on the moon, Saraceno tells us that the next step is to gain experience, here on earth, of a gradual absence of gravity.
Inside the Fondazione Pier Luigi e Natalina Remotti, the bubbles suspended in space make us perceive a gravitational feeling inside the building itself, which on the ground floor interacts with the diverging trajectories of the three video projections Space Elevator II (2009), and on the upper level with the photographs of the flight experimentation in Argentina, and with the images arranged around a table, entitled Ladies and Gentlemen We are Floating in Space and Mars on Water (2009). The result is a variable circuit that involves above and below, making us sense a “ballooning” in the atmosphere and the building itself.