Tomás Saraceno

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Tomás Saraceno
Tomás Saraceno a Firenze, 21 febbraio 2020, 04.jpg
Born1973 (age 47–48)
San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina
NationalityArgentinian
Known forInstallation Art, Sculpture
Websitehttps://studiotomassaraceno.org/

Tomás Saraceno (San Miguel de Tucumán, 1973) is an Argentinian contemporary artist. His practice is informed by the concepts linking art, life science and the social sciences. Enmeshed at the junction of these worlds, his floating sculptures, community projects and interactive installations propose and explore new, sustainable ways of inhabiting and sensing the environment. In 2007 Saraceno activated projects aimed towards an ethical collaboration with the atmosphere, including Museo Aero Solar.[1] These projects grew into the international, interdisciplinary artistic community Aerocene, who with Saraceno in 2020 launched the certified, untethered flight Fly with Aerocene Pacha, achieving six world records for altitude, distance, duration (both in the general and female category) using only the warmth of the sun and the air.[2] Saraceno's interest in spiders and their webs led to the formation of Arachnophilia.net and the Arachnomancy App.[3] Through these platforms Saraceno invites people from around the globe to weave the web of interspecies understanding and take part in the challenge of Mapping Against Extinction.[4][5]

Education and artistic career[]

Tomás Saraceno studied architecture at Universidad Nacional de Buenos Aires in Argentina between 1992 and 1999, after which he studied art and architecture in a postgraduate program at Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes de la Nación Ernesto de la Cárcova, also in Buenos Aires. Saraceno then moved to Europe to complete his post graduate studies at Städelschule. There, he was directed by Daniel Birnbaum (curator of the 53rd Venice Biennale) and studied under professors and Ben van Berkel. In 2003-2004 Saraceno participated in the course "Progettazione e Produzione delle Arti Visive" (Design and Production of Visual Arts), held by Hans Ulrich Obrist and Olafur Eliasson at Instituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia (IUAV).[6]

Saraceno's first installations were exhibited at the Venice Biennale of Architecture in 2002 and again at the Venice Arte Biennale in 2003, as well as at the São Paulo Biennale of 2006.

In 2009, he attended the International Space Studies Program at NASA Center Ames (Silicon Valley, California).[7] That same year, Saraceno exhibited again in Venice, this time at the 53rd Arte Venice Biennale "Fare Mondi/Making Worlds", curated by Daniel Birnbaum,[8] and won the Calder Prize.


Saraceno's work has been widely exhibited internationally in solo and group exhibitions. Most notably, these include:

Awards[]

  • 2019, The Golden Madonnina, The Design Prize - In the artistic realm.[21]
  • 2010, 1822 Kunstpreis.[22]
  • 2009, Alexander Calder Prize.[23]

Selected works and projects[]

Cloud Cities[]

Saraceno's long-term artistic research project (2002–present) draws inspiration from Buckminster Fuller and other radical architects. The aim of the project is to create a modular, transnational city in the clouds, the realization of which would be a new model for liberating and sustainable building practices.

The exhibition Cloud Cities, presented at Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum für Gegenwart in Berlin (2011–12), consisted of a collection of geometric, inflated shapes that challenge the notions of place, space, future and gravity. Through the exhibition, Saraceno sought to explain how human beings live in combination with their environment. As curator and art historian notes, "an aspect that is of great importance to Saraceno in this context is that the city's shape and size can be changed continually, subjecting conventional ideas about boundaries and territories to critical scrutiny. (...) The works he creates as part of this exploration can be considered components of sorts for the future cloud-city that can be assembled to create the desired complex in its entirety. But the components also exist in isolation, as independent sculptures or installations, evincing forces and qualities of their own that render them highly fascinating constructs."[24]

Observatory/Airport City[]

Related to Cloud Cities, Saraceno launched an exhibition 'Observatory/Air-Port-City' at the Hayward Gallery London (2008). The exhibition was composed of a collection of spheres, each housing autonomous residential units. The network of habitable cells float in the air, combining and recombining like clouds, constructing a flying airport. This is Saraceno's utopic vision: to create a new airborne nomadism.[25]

On the Roof: Cloud City[]

Saraceno exhibited 'On the Roof: Cloud City' in the Iris and B Gerald Cantor Roof Garden at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) New York City (2012). This consisted of a constellation of sixteen large, interconnected modules composed of glass segments and cut in non-identical geometric shapes held in place by steel joints, reinforcements and steel cables. Visitors were able to walk through the installation, which draws its shape from bacteria, clouds, universes, foam and neural communication networks.[26]

In Orbit[]

In Orbit, installed since June 2013 at K21 Ständehaus, Düsseldorf, spans Saraceno's inquiries into urbanism, natural engineering and communication. Curated by Marion Ackermann, the installation hangs more than 25 meters above the piazza of the K21.[27] Saraceno's installation combines the structure of a spider's web with the vision of Cloud Cities. Over 400,000 visitors to the exhibition have strolled, climbed, laid, on a 2,500 sqm web, dotted with massive inflated PVC spheres. The movement of each participant is felt by others, exhibiting a potential for new modes of human communication.

On Space Time Foam[]

'On Space Time Foam', an installation by Saraceno and curated by , was inspired by the cubic shape of the exhibition space at HangarBicocca, Milan, appearing there in 2013. The structure was composed of three levels of thin, clear film fixed to the walls and floating at a height of 14 to 20 metres, covering an area of 400 square metres. Visitors were granted access to three levels of the artwork, finding themselves in mid-air, encouraging the loss of spatial coordination. HangarBicocca has a cubic form.

The cube, a geometric form often used by scientists to represent the concepts of space and time, inspired Saraceno to create an installation in which the visitors' movements enact the time variable, thereby introducing the concept of the fourth dimension within the three-dimensional space. The title of the work can be traced to quantum mechanics on the origins of the universe, distinguished by the idea of extremely fast-moving subatomic particles that can trigger changes in spatio-temporal matter. Freely inspired by these theories, Saraceno makes their movements metaphorically visible. The installation is a device that calls perceptual certainties into question; it is an element that modifies the architecture containing it, a structure that makes the interrelationships among people and visible space, an attempt to overcome the laws of gravity. As the artist explained, "the films constituting the living core of HangarBicocca are constantly altered by climate and the simple movement of people. Each step, each breath, modifies the entire space: it is a metaphor for how our interrelations affect the Earth and other universes."

Solar Bell[]

Saraceno has developed a Solar Bell flying sculpture made of lightweight and sustainable materials.[28] Its design is based on the modular tetrahedron, or four-sided pyramid, invented by Alexander Graham Bell during his early investigations into manned flight. Bell made important discoveries in the field of aviation and frame construction, and happened upon the strongest geometrical structure known in the cosmos, the octet truss. This was the same spaceframe that Buckminster Fuller later followed for his Geodesic dome. 'Solar Bell' was the final project in a series of artworks created to accompany the expansion of the Port of Rotterdam with the construction of Maasvlakte 2 in the Netherlands in 2013. Solar Bell Ensemble, Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, USA 2016.

Flying Plaza[]

Inspired by Solar Bell, Saraceno developed the idea of entire cities built upon lighter-than-air structures and sustainable energy technologies, lifted by the wind and suspended above the surface of the Earth. This 'flying plaza' represents an inquiry into public space, which according to Saraceno's vision, can be erected in alternative and fossil-free ways. Saraceno imagines spaces of dwellings as new urban skyscapes: flying buildings elevated by wind power alone, which erase the boundaries defined by geopolitics, and start to respond to local specificities.

Aerocene[]

Aerocene is a project that aims to explore environmental issues scientifically and artistically. It consists of sculptures that are kept in the air by the Sun's heat and by infrared ratiation.[29]

Aerosolar sculptures were officially presented during the United Nations Climate Change Conference COP21, at Grand Palais, Paris, 2015, after that a similar prototype has been tested in November at the White Sands Dunes of New Mexico.[30] On November 8, 2015, it broke world records by achieving the longest and most sustainable certified flight (without fossil-fuel, solar panel, helium or batteries) ever registered: During approximately 2 hours and 15 minutes, seven people were lifted up in White Sands' desert landscape. With a net lift of more than 250 kg, the payload of the "D-O AEC Aerocene" solar sculpture has no precedent in the long history of manned solar balloon flight attempts.[31]

The project has evolved from Tomás Saraceno's residency at L'Observatoire de l'Espace, CNES. Led by Saraceno, the project's team is composed of leading scientists and engineers, including collaboration with Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS), Braunschweig University of Technology - Institute of Architecture-related Art (IAK), TBA21 Academy, Red Cross Red Crescent, and numerous universities, research centers, cultural and art institutions, and museums around the world.

Aerocene Backpack[]

The Aerocene Backpack is a flight kit. Participants can hack the devices pack, create their own lightweight sensors, and lift them up. Data collected with the Aerocene Backpack can be uploaded and shared with Aerocene's open-source online community, via an interactive website that encourages participants all over the world to share their experiments, photos and videos, comments, and innovations.[32]

Aerocene App[]

Beginning in 2012 and based on a concept and long-term research by artist Tomás Saraceno, the Aerocene App is based on the Float Predictor, an online digital tool developed by the Aerocene Foundation and Studio Tomás Saraceno in collaboration with Lodovica Illari, Glenn Flierl, and Bill McKenna from the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), together with Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST) with further support from Imperial College London, Radioamateur, and the UK High Altitude Society.

The Aerocene App developed by Tomas Saraceno consists of a global forecasting system using open meteorological data to predict flight paths of aerosolar sculptures circling around the globe without CO2 emissions. The app incorporates real-time information from 16-day forecasts of wind speeds at different altitudes.[33]

Museo Aero Solar Community[]

The "Museo Aero Solar" group is an open-source international community, initiated in 2008 by Tomás Saraceno in conversation with Alberto Pesavento. The community organizes events around the world to turn plastic bags into lighter-than-air sculptures, creating airborne flying museums. Sending a message for sustainability, Museo Aero Solar retakes and transforms a pollutant. The resulting collection includes more than 20,000 plastic bags culled from countries including Colombia, Cuba, France, Germany, Italy, Austria, Palestine, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates and the United States, amongst others.[34]

Stillness in Motion - Cloud Cities[]

Stillness in Motion — Cloud Cities, was launched by Saraceno and curated by Joseph Becker at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMoMA), San Francisco in 2016. Organized by the SFMOMA Architecture and Design department, the exhibition comprises an immersive, site-specific cloudscape installation of suspended tension structures and floating sculptures, as well as explorations of the intricate constructions of spider webs.[35]

Arachnophilia[]

Arachnophilia is a not-for-profit, interdisciplinary spider/web research community. Building on the innovations arising from Saraceno's collaborative research into spider/web architectures, materials, modes of vibrational signaling and behaviour, the broad aim of Arachnophilia is to increase visibility and change people's perceptions of spiders and webs within the context of the current ecological crisis.[36]

Arachnomancy App[]

On the occasion of the 2019 Venice Biennale, Tomás Saraceno launched the Arachnomancy App. Through this app, users are encouraged to notice, document and map spider webs they encounter in both wild and urban spaces. This app also uses the Arachnophilia biotremology archives to realise vibratory modes of interspecies communication that mobile devices make possible.[37]

As users upload images, the Arachnophilia team attempts to add species or web-typographic information and geographical context, where possible. These photos and data populate a dynamic, global map. In turn, this map and the data it collects has the potential to generate an important resource and tool for researchers tracking species diversity - a dynamic archive of spider web biodiversity.[38]

Hybrid Webs[]

The secondary output of the research conducted in the Arachnid Research Lab are the Hybrid Webs - the collective term for a series of sculptures devised by Saraceno. Each sculpture, made entirely of spider silk is designed to appear as a unique, geometric galaxy floating in infinite space. Creating the sculptures means incorporating webs woven by spiders who are social, asocial or between the two. During the building period, the sculptures are turned onto each side, allowing gravity to aid the interweaving of silk from different sorts of spider. The works' titles reveal the technical specifications of each sculptural element; the genus and species of spiders employed and the time taken by each spider to complete its web. The final sculpture is thereby an emblem of an encounter which might not otherwise have succeeded, and so prompts a reflection on human coexistence with ourselves and the natural world.

Hybrid Webs have been exhibited worldwide:

  • "May you live in interesting times", Venice Biennale, curated by Ralph Rugoff (2019).
  • "ON AIR", Carte blanche to Tomás Saraceno at Palais de Tokyo, curated by Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel (2018-2019).
  • Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York and at Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2018).
  • Pinksummer Contemporary Art, Rome (2016).
  • Istanbul Design Biennial, Istanbul (2016).
  • 11th Shanghai Biennial, Shanghai (2016).
  • Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt (2016).
  • UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, USA (2016).
  • MARCO, Museum for Contemporary Art, Monterrey, Mexico (2016).
  • Cultural Center; , Geneva (2015).
  • Chicago Architectural Biennial, Chicago (2015).
  • Louvre Museum, Paris (2015).
  • , Berlin (2014).
  • , Genoa, Italy (2014).
  • Esther Schipper, Berlin (2012).

Arachnid Orchestra Jam Session[]

Saraceno has also developed a line of inquiry into the sound properties of spider webs. In collaboration with arachnologists, musicians and sound engineers based in Singapore and elsewhere, Saraceno has harnessed the structural properties of spider silk, transforming the web into a musical instrument. Since spiders do not possess an auditory system, they perceive the world around them with pressure and vibrations that come from their own movement, for example web-plucking. A cobweb is therefore a sensory object, an extension of a spider's body and the vibrations communicated via this practice are used for attraction, hunting and other social interactions. Saraceno has succeeded in amplifying these inaudible vibrations and web-pluckings into acoustic rhythms.[39] This was presented by Saraceno at the 'Arachnid Orchestra Jam Session', curated by Ute Meta Bauer at the NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore (2015). The focus of this exhibition, which included a run of live performances, was to push the boundaries of interspecies communication. This insight into non-human modes of communication helped formulate a more complex understanding of interspecies cohabitation – an idea at the fore of Saraceno's vision.[40]

This research has also been presented in the major solo exhibition 'Cosmic Jive' at Villa Croce Museum of Contemporary Art (2014) and Saraceno's first solo exhibition in his native Argentina titled 'How to Entangle the Universe in a Spider Web' at the Museo de Arte Moderno, Buenos Aires (2017).

Permanent installations[]

  • 2019, Sundial for Spatial Echoes, Bauhaus Museum Weimar, Weimar, Germany.
  • 2017, Gravitational Waves, Z33 Kunstencentrum, Genk, Belgium.
  • 2017, Stillness in Motion - 3 Airborne Self-Assemblies, Singapore, Singapore.
  • 2017, Cloud Cities – Nebulous Thresholds, Rollins College, Florida, USA.
  • 2017, On Cosmic Clouds, NYU Abu Dhabi Library, Abu Dhabi, UAE.
  • 2016, Cloud Cities: HAT-P-12, Taipei, Taiwan.
  • 2016, Caelum Dust, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA.
  • 2015, Cloud Cities / Air-Port-City, Domaine du Muy, Parc de sculptures contemporaines, France.
  • 2015, Sundial for Spatial Echoes, Aker Brygge, Oslo, Norway.
  • 2008, On clouds (Air-Port-City), Towada Art Center, Towada, Japan.
  • 2007, Flying Garden, European Patent Office (EPO) Munich, Germany.

Collections[]

Saraceno's work is represented in public and private collections including:

Publications[]

  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2020. Aria. Ed. Marsilio Editori.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2018. Wallpaper Magazine, Guest Editor.
  • Saraceno, Tomás with Etienne Turpin and Christine Shaw. 2018. The work of the wind: (Volume I) Land. (Light Breeze – Stillness in Motion) K. Verlag. Berlin.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2018. Aerographies. Ed. Fosun Foundation.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2018. Palais 28 ON AIR. Ed. Palais de Tokyo.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. Our Interplanetary Bodies. Ed. Asia Cultural Center.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. How to Entangle the Universe in a Spiderweb. Ed. Pamphlet, Moderno.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. Flying Plaza. Ed. Spector Books, Berlin.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. Aerocene. Ed. SKIRA, Milan.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. Arachnid Orchestra. Jam Sessions. Ed. Ute Meta Bauer. Singapore: .
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. Notes on Aerocene. Ed. Studio Tomás Saraceno, Aerocene Foundation.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2017. Aerosolar Journeys. Ed. Schaschl, Sabine, Zechlin, René. Berlin: Walter König.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2016. Tomás Saraceno. 163,000 Light Years. Monterrey: MARCO, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey.
  • Saraceno, Tomás. 2015. Aerocene. Berlin: Studio Tomás Saraceno.
  • Saraceno, Tomás, and Mario Codognato. 2015. Tomás Saraceno: Becoming Aerosolar. Vienna: Belvedere.
  • Saraceno, Tomás, and Joseph Grima. 2014. Cosmic Jive: The Spider Sessions. Genoa: Asinello Press.
  • Saraceno, Tomás, Meredith Malone, Igor Marjanović, Inés Katzenstein, and D. L Weaire. 2014. Tomás Saraceno: Cloud Specific. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Saraceno, Tomás, and Sara Arrhenius. 2011. Tomás Saraceno: 14 Billions (Working Title). Milan: Skira.
  • Saraceno, Tomás, Marion Ackermann, Daniel Birnbaum, , and Hans Ulrich Obrist. 2011. Cloud Cities. Berlin: Distanz Verlag.
  • Saraceno, Tomás, and Juliane von Herz. 2010. Tomás Saraceno: Cloud Cities/Air-Port-City. Bielefeld: Kerber Verlag.

Personal life[]

Saraceno lives and works in Berlin.

References[]

  1. ^ "Your plastic bags might be part of this levitating installation". youtube. 19 Oct 2018.
  2. ^ "Tomás Saraceno's balloon working just with renewable energy". domus. 18 Feb 2020.
  3. ^ "An Invitation to Get Caught in the Spider's Web". Hyperallergic. 2 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Mapping Against Extinction". 29 October 2020.
  5. ^ "Tanya Bonakdar Gallery: Tomás Saraceno". 29 October 2020.
  6. ^ Tomás Saraceno : 14 billions (working title). Milan: Skira. 2011. ISBN 978-8857208572.
  7. ^ "Tomas Saraceno | Artists 4 Climate -". www.artists4climate.com. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  8. ^ "Galaxies Forming Along Filaments … - Projects - Tomás Saraceno". tomassaraceno.com.
  9. ^ "Tomas Saraceno-Aria". Palazzo Strozzi. 2 February 2020.
  10. ^ "Biennale Arte 2019". La Biennale Di Venezia. 22 October 2020.
  11. ^ "Carte Blanche to Tomás Saraceno". Palais de Tokyo. 22 October 2020.
  12. ^ "K21: Tomás Saraceno — in orbit". Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen. 29 October 2020.
  13. ^ "Tomás Saraceno installs Aerocene metallic orbs in Paris' Grand Palais". dezeen. 29 October 2020.
  14. ^ "Behind the Artwork: Tomás Saraceno's Aerocene Project". MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST). 29 October 2020.
  15. ^ "Behind the Artwork: Tomás Saraceno's Aerocene Project". NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore. 29 October 2020.
  16. ^ "Arachnid Orchestra. Jam Sessions". Soundcloud. 29 October 2020.
  17. ^ "Tomás Saraceno. Cloud Cities". Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. 29 October 2020.
  18. ^ "tomás saraceno: cloud cities at hamburger bahnhof, berlin". designboom. 29 October 2020.
  19. ^ "Tomás Saraceno on the Roof: Cloud City". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 29 October 2020.
  20. ^ "tomas saraceno: cloud city on the met roof". designboom. 29 October 2020.
  21. ^ "and the winners of the Design Prize 2019 are..." designboom. 15 April 2019.
  22. ^ "Eine Art Fliegenfänger". FrankfurterRundschau (in German). 2 February 2009.
  23. ^ "Tomas Saraceno Wins Calder Prize". artforum. 19 May 2009.
  24. ^ Tomás Saraceno: Cloud Cities. Wuppertal: Distanz Verlag. 2011. ISBN 978-3942405379.
  25. ^ Tomás Saraceno : Cloud Cities, air-port-city. Bielefeld, Germany: Kerber. 2010. ISBN 978-3866784871.
  26. ^ Tomas Saraceno Cloud-specific. Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum. 2012. ISBN 978-0936316352.
  27. ^ "In Orbit". www.kunstsammlung.de.
  28. ^ "Solar Bell Ensemble - Projects - Tomás Saraceno". tomassaraceno.com.
  29. ^ http://news.mit.edu/2017/aerocene-soars-at-wef-davos-0209
  30. ^ "At COP21, finding hope for climate in the "Aerocene"". MIT News.
  31. ^ "Aerocene : Space Without Rockets (EN) - Semaphore". www.ewenchardronnet.com.
  32. ^ "Aerocene Campus". Aerocene.
  33. ^ "From Anthropocene to Aerocene". Palazzo strozzi.
  34. ^ Tomás Saraceno: Becoming Aerosolar. Vienna: 21er Haus, Belvedere. 2015. ISBN 978-3-902805-70-6.
  35. ^ "Tomás Saraceno". SFMOMA.
  36. ^ "Arachnophilia". Studio Tomas Saraceno.
  37. ^ "Tomas Saraceno and Spiders". designboom.
  38. ^ "Arachnomancy APP". Studio Tomas Saraceno.
  39. ^ Saraceno, Tomás (2014). Cosmic Jive: The Spider Sessions. Asinello Press. ISBN 978-8890968051.
  40. ^ "Arachnid Orchestra". www.arachnidorchestra.org.

Online references[]

  • World's first fully solar certified manned flight [1]
  • 53rd Venice Biennale [2]
  • UN Climate Change Conference Paris COP21 [3]
  • L'Observatoire de l'Espace [4]
  • Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS), [5]
  • Calder Prize [6]
  • TBA21 Academy [7] [8]
  • Museo Aero Solar [9]
  • Becoming Aerosolar [10]
  • Hayward Gallery [11]
  • Hangar Bicocca [12]
  • K21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen [13]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""