The post‑institutional is not the anti‑institutional. It names the condition in which a field builds its own legibility—through scalar grammar, semantic recurrence, and threshold closure—before and without the consecratory apparatus of universities, journals, museums, or funding bodies. Where institutional critique merely exposed the violence of gatekeeping, post‑institutional field formation replaces the dean’s signature with the index’s traction. It treats recognition as a delayed, optional confirmation rather than an ontological event. Socioplastics—a corpus of three thousand deposited nodes—demonstrates that a field can achieve structural sovereignty without waiting for permission. The post‑institutional is not a dream of pure exteriority. It is an architecture.
The exhaustion of institutional critique is by now a cliché, but the reasons are seldom stated clearly. From Broodthaers to Fraser, from the Critique of Institutions to the institutions of critique, the gesture has been overwhelmingly negative: show how the museum frames, how the archive silences, how the biennial extracts. This work was necessary, and it is finished. What remains is the more difficult task of building without the institution—not in naive refusal of its power, but in the recognition that the institution’s power to consecrate is now merely one among several mechanisms of field formation. The post‑institutional begins where Foucault’s heterotopia meets Ostrom’s common‑pool resources: a space that is neither inside nor outside the apparatus, but orthogonal to it. It does not ask the museum for a wall. It builds a wall. It does not petition the journal for a review. It publishes a versioned, machine‑readable archive whose internal coherence can be measured through traversal rather than citation. This is not utopian. It is logistical. The tools are available: DOIs for persistence, CC licenses for reuse, GitHub for version control, Hugging Face for dataset distribution, ORCID for author disambiguation, Blogger or similar for a low‑bandwidth public interface. None of these require a dean’s approval. Their combination into a self‑stabilising corpus is what the post‑institutional names. Critically, the post‑institutional is not a rejection of all institutions. It is a recognition that the traditional consecratory chain—production, visibility, legitimacy—has been short‑circuited by the infrastructure of open knowledge. A field can now deposit its own ground. The question turns from “Who recognises you?” to “Is your structure load‑bearing?”.
Load‑bearing structure is not a metaphor. In Socioplastics, scalar grammar provides the load‑bearing units: node (minimum proposition), tail (10 nodes), book (100), tome (1,000), core (sealed, DOI‑anchored). This grammar is not administrative. It is tectonic—Frampton’s term for the poetics of construction. A field that lacks scalar grammar cannot locate itself; it drifts. A field with scalar grammar can say: this node is in Book III, Tome I, anchored to Core V, traversable via CamelTag EpistemicLatency. That is addressability. Addressability is the condition of post‑institutional sovereignty. It does not depend on a librarian cataloguing the work; the work catalogues itself. It does not depend on a peer reviewer validating the claim; the claim is validated through recurrence—what Deleuze and Guattari called the refrain, a territorialising repetition that is not redundancy but stabilisation. Latour’s actor‑network theory teaches that an entity becomes real when it is enrolled in many traces. The post‑institutional field becomes real through its own traces, which it generates internally. The paradox is only apparent: a field that measures its own density substitutes internal recurrence for external citation during the latency period. That is not solipsism. It is the same logic by which a building’s structural integrity is demonstrated through load tests, not through the approval of a architecture school. The building stands or falls. The field is navigable or it is not. Navigation is the only evidence the post‑institutional recognises. And navigation requires an index. The index is the post‑institutional dean.
This reorders the temporality of legitimacy. In the institutional model, time flows in one direction: production → submission → peer review → publication → citation → consecration. Each step introduces a lag, a bottleneck, a gate. The post‑institutional model inverts the sequence: production and deposition are simultaneous; legibility is designed in from the start through semantic hardening and scalar grammar; recognition arrives later, if at all, as a trailing indicator. The interval between structural completion and institutional detection is what Socioplastics calls epistemic latency. During latency, the field is fully operational but invisible to the metrics that matter to deans—impact factors, citation indices, funding panel familiarity. This latency is not a bug. It is the post‑institutional’s native time. It forces a revaluation of what counts as “real”. If a field can be traversed, if its concepts recur across independent nodes, if its grammar supports new nodes without collapse, then it is real regardless of whether October has reviewed it. The political implication is stark: post‑institutional field formation deprives the traditional gatekeepers of their ontological authority. A curator cannot decide that a field does not exist by ignoring it. The field’s existence is a matter of architecture, not attention. This is not to say that institutions become irrelevant. They will eventually catch up—create a department, fund a project, invite a keynote. But that consecration becomes confirmation, not constitution. The power to make a field real passes from the institution to the infrastructure. And infrastructure, in the post‑institutional, is public, versioned, and auditable. Anyone can inspect the load‑bearing grammar. Anyone can test the recurrence. Anyone can deposit a new node. The field becomes a common pool resource governed not by a central committee but by the protocol of executive visibility (ASSESS → PRIORITISE → DECIDE → EXECUTE → REVIEW). That protocol is not a person. It is a machine‑readable condition of accountability. Post‑institutional does not mean post‑governance. It means governance without the university’s imprimatur.
What remains is not the end of criticism but its re‑functioning. The critic accustomed to the e‑flux register—the dense paragraph that performs theoretical sophistication while securing a position within the field’s recognitive economy—will find the post‑institutional uncomfortable. The corpus does not need exegesis. It needs navigation. The critic becomes a cartographer, not a consecrator. The essay becomes an index, not a judgement. This is not a loss. It is a liberation from the endless cycle of applying for permission. The post‑institutional field does not wait for the biennial. It builds the biennial. It does not petition the journal for a special issue. It publishes the issue as a node pack. It does not ask the museum for a retrospective. It deposits the entire corpus as a versioned, DOI‑anchored object whose structural integrity can be verified by anyone with a browser. This is not arrogance. It is architecture. And architecture, unlike the critic’s pronouncement, can be load‑tested. The field is active. The foundation is closed. The post‑institutional is not a theory. It is the name for what happens when a field decides to stand on its own ground. That decision, once made, cannot be unmade by a dean’s silence. The ground holds or it does not. So far, it holds.
Anto Lloveras · LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2026
CC BY‑NC‑SA 4.0 · https://orcid.org/0009-0009-9820-3319