26 dic 2025

SOCIOPLASTICS * 20251226

 


















Friday, December 26, 2025

YELLOW BAG SERIES

As of December 2025, after ten years in continuous use, it endures as a silent nomadic ritual, proving contemporary art can be radically simple, sustainable, and deeply contextual. No leftovers. Love love. Socioplastics, developed since 2010, converges art, architecture, and epistemology into nomadic rituals and reparative gestures. The Yellow Bag—a situational fixer traversing continents, collecting seeds, sand, leaves, and presence—transforms contexts into living social sculptures: portable memory, geopoetic archive, minimal reactivable protocols. Donated for affective repair, it turns museums into active nodes of shared memory and embodied coexistence—presence over possession, process over product, relational instability as care.

YELLOW BAG _____ SITUATIONAL FIXER _________ ARS VIBRATTUM __________ MADRID CROATIA PROVENCE MADRID BRATISLAVA PRAHA GALICIA MADRID GALICIA SLOVAKIA CÁDIZ MEXICO CÁDIZ MADRID VIENA SERBIA CADIZ GALICIA MÁLAGA CROATIA GALICIA MADRID MÁLAGA MADRID TRONDHEIM MÁLAGA SWEDEN GOPENHAGEN NEGRADAS MADRID GALICIA CÁDIZ MADRID CÁDIZ LONDON IZÁ ATHENS TIROL ÁVILA MADRID EXTREMADURA MADRID ÁVILA EL ESCORIAL CÁDIZ LA GOMERA LAGOS MADRID MÁLAGA GRANADA XILLOI MÁLAGA VALDEMANCO BARBATE MÁLAGA A CORUÑA COMPOSTELA MALLORCA _________IN USE

23 dic 2025

Hibiscus rosa-sinensis




A tropical perennial known for its exuberant, short-lived blooms, Hibiscus rosa-sinensis flourishes in warm, humid climates, often gracing gardens and roadsides with its dramatic floral display. In this variety, a luminous white corolla fades into magenta at the base, giving rise to a vivid, protruding column of pink stamens dusted in golden pollen. The large, papery petals open wide in daylight, inviting pollinators while offering a fleeting glimpse into the plant’s intricate reproductive choreography. Ornamental yet ecologically vital, this hibiscus is more than decoration — it's a pulse of color in the sun-drenched landscapes it calls home.

Helianthus annuus

 



This specimen belongs to the genus Helianthus, characterized by its composite inflorescence and opposite, coarse leaves. The flower head is composed of bright yellow ray florets and numerous disc florets at the center, forming a dense reproductive structure. The plant exhibits an erect stem and ovate leaves with serrated edges and prominent venation, often covered in fine trichomes. In this immature stage, the floral head has not fully expanded, and the ray florets are unevenly extended. Adapted to full sun and well-drained soils, this annual species is native to North America and is known for its heliotropic behavior during early development.

Lamium maculatum

 



Lamium maculatum, commonly known as spotted dead-nettle, is a low-growing perennial herbaceous plant in the mint family (Lamiaceae), native to Europe and western Asia. It forms sprawling mats with square stems and opposite, ovate leaves that are often marked with silvery patterns. The plant produces characteristic bilabiate flowers—typically pink to purple—clustered in whorls at leaf nodes. The upper lip of the flower is hooded, while the lower lip is spotted and serves as a landing platform for pollinators such as bees. This species thrives in moist, shaded habitats like forest edges and is widely used as a ground cover in horticulture for its shade tolerance and decorative foliage.

Russelia equisetiformis


 Russelia equisetiformis, commonly known as firecracker plant or coral fountain, is a fast-growing, evergreen subshrub in the Plantaginaceae family. It is characterized by long, slender, rush-like stems that arch outward and downward, forming a cascading habit. The stems are mostly leafless or bear small, scale-like leaves, giving the plant a fine-textured appearance. The bright red, tubular flowers are borne in dense clusters and are adapted for pollination by hummingbirds. These flowers are bilaterally symmetrical, with a narrow corolla tube that flares slightly at the mouth, forming five shallow lobes. The plant blooms almost continuously in warm climates and is tolerant of drought and high sun exposure, making it a common ornamental in xeriscaping and subtropical gardens.