BAITBALL (01) “I’ll slip an extra shrimp on the barbie for you” at Palazzo San Giuseppe / Polignano a Mare

BAITBALL (01)  
“I’ll slip an extra shrimp on the barbie for you”




Curated by: Catbox Contemporary, Davide Da Pieve, Essenza Club, Flip Project, Ginny Project, Harlesden High Street & Twee Whistler, Like A Little Disaster, Felice Moramarco, Nights, PANE project, PIA Studio, Progetto, Rhizome
Parking Garage, Studioconcreto, The Sunroom, Ultrastudio.

January 5 – March 15 – 2020

Palazzo San Giuseppe, in via Mulini 2
Polignano a
Mare


Michaela
Zuge-Bruton / Progetto (Lecce) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Daniel Van
Straalen / Ultrastudio (Pescara – Los Angeles) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Daniel Van
Straalen / Ultrastudio (Pescara – Los Angeles) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Daniel Van
Straalen / Ultrastudio (Pescara – Los Angeles) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view. –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 John Roebas, Keren Cytter, Kayla
Ephros / The Sunroom (Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Keren Cytter, / The Sunroom
(Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.
Keren Cytter, Kayla Ephros / The
Sunroom (Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.
Keren Cytter, / The Sunroom
(Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.
Kayla
Ephros / The Sunroom (Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.
John Roebas, Keren Cytter / The
Sunroom (Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.
John
Roebas / The Sunroom (Richmond) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Jens Settergren / Harlesden High
Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Jens Settergren / Harlesden High
Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.
BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.
Hands in the box / PANE project
(Milano) & Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.
Hands in the box / PANE project
(Milano) & Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Emma Pryde for Hands in the box /
PANE project (Milano) & Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

Botond Keresztesi for Hands in the
box / PANE project (Milano) & Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) –
Photo L.A.L.D.

Jan S. Hansen for Hands in the box /
PANE project (Milano) & Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.
BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.
Francesco
Pacelli / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Francesco
Pacelli / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 Patrick
Tuttofuoco, How to Make a Delicious Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – – Photo
L.A.L.D.

 Per-Oskar Leu, How to Make a
Delicious Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

BAITBALL01, Installation view – –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 Natalia
Trejbalova / Felice Moramarco – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Natalia
Trejbalova / Felice Moramarco – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Agostino
Quaranta / Felice Moramarco – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Agostino
Quaranta / Felice Moramarco – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view – –
Photo L.A.L.D. – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Léo
Fourdriner / Essenza Club (Nomadic) – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view – –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 Maria Adele
Del Vecchio / Studioconcreto (Lecce) – – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Riccardo
D’avola-Corte / Essenza Club (Nomadic) – Photo L.A.L.D.

BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

Abby Lloyd and Andrew Birk / PANE
project (Milano) & Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

Ludovic Beillard / Catbox
Contemporary /New York) –  Photo L.A.L.D.

 Ludovic Beillard / Catbox
Contemporary /New York) –  Photo L.A.L.D.

 Ludovic Beillard / Catbox
Contemporary /New York) –  Photo L.A.L.D.

 Ludovic Beillard / Catbox
Contemporary /New York) –  Photo L.A.L.D.

 Ludovic Beillard / Catbox
Contemporary /New York) –  Photo L.A.L.D.

 Ludovic Beillard / Catbox
Contemporary /New York) –  Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01,
Installation view – Photo PIA Studio, Raffaella Quaranta. 

 Installation
view / PIA (Lecce) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Marco
Bruzzone / PIA (Lecce) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Pierluigi
Calignano/ PIA (Lecce) – Photo PIA Studio, Raffaella Quaranta.

 How to Make a Delicious Tea,
Installation view.  / Flip Project
(Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Philipp Timischl, How to Make a
Delicious Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Eloise Hawser, How to Make a
Delicious Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

Don Elektro, Olga Fedorova, Helin
Sahin, Gaspar Willmann / Rhizome Parking garage (Online) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Olga Fedorova / Rhizome Parking
garage (Online) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Helin Sahin / Rhizome Parking garage (Online) – Photo L.A.L.D.

BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.
Martin Soto Climent, How
to Make a Delicious Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Installation view / Essenza Club
(Nomadic) – Photo L.A.L.D.

BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 Alessandro
Nucci / Essenza Club (Nomadic) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Jennyfer Haddad / Essenza Club
(Nomadic) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Jennyfer Haddad / Essenza Club
(Nomadic) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 Angélique
Heidler / Ginny Project (London) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Angélique
Heidler / Ginny Project (London) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Angélique
Heidler / Ginny Project (London) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

Urara Tsuchiya, How to Make a
Delicious Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Andrea Sala, How to Make a Delicious
Tea / Flip Project (Napoli) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Nights
(Paolo Bufalini, Filippo Cecconi, Edoardo Ciaralli, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso
Gatti, Filippo Tappi) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Nights
(Paolo Bufalini, Filippo Cecconi, Edoardo Ciaralli, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso
Gatti, Filippo Tappi) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Nights
(Paolo Bufalini, Filippo Cecconi, Edoardo Ciaralli, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso
Gatti, Filippo Tappi) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Nights
(Paolo Bufalini, Filippo Cecconi, Edoardo Ciaralli, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso
Gatti, Filippo Tappi) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Nights
(Paolo Bufalini, Filippo Cecconi, Edoardo Ciaralli, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso
Gatti, Filippo Tappi) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Nights
(Paolo Bufalini, Filippo Cecconi, Edoardo Ciaralli, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso
Gatti, Filippo Tappi) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Lorenzo Lunghi / Harlesden High
Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Lorenzo Lunghi / Harlesden High
Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Lorenzo Lunghi / Harlesden High
Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

 BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

Alessandro Fogo, Neckar Doll /
Harlesden High Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Neckar Doll / Harlesden High Street
Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Viola Morini / Harlesden High Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

BAITBALL01, Installation view –
Photo L.A.L.D.

Davide Dicorato / Harlesden High Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Nicola Gobbetto / Harlesden High Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Diana Gheorghiu / Harlesden High
Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Avery Noyes / Harlesden High Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Jaana-Kristiina Alakoski / Harlesden High Street Gallery (London) & Twee Whistler – Photo L.A.L.D.

Julie
Grosche and Christine Navin / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

 Julie
Grosche and Christine Navin / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

Julie
Grosche and Christine Navin / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

 Julie
Grosche and Christine Navin / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

 Julie
Grosche and Christine Navin / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo
L.A.L.D.

 Virginia
Lee Montgomery / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Virginia
Lee Montgomery / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Alessandro
Di Pietro and Enrico Boccioletti / Felice Moramarco – Photo L.A.L.D.

 Alessandro
Di Pietro and Enrico Boccioletti / Felice Moramarco – Photo L.A.L.D.

Guido Segni
/ Davide Da Pieve – Photo L.A.L.D.
Guido Segni
/ Davide Da Pieve – Photo L.A.L.D.
Virginia Lee
Montgomery / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.

Virginia Lee
Montgomery / Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Photo L.A.L.D.




BAITBALL (01)
“I’ll slip an extra shrimp on the barbie for you”
January 5 – March 15 – 2020
Curated by:
Catbox Contemporary (New York) – Davide Da Pieve – Essenza Club (Nomadic) – Flip Project (Napoli) – Ginny Project (London) – Harlesden High Street (London) & Twee Whistler – Like A Little Disaster (Polignano a Mare) – Felice Moramarco – Nights (Nomadic) – PANE project (Milano) – PIA Studio (Lecce) – Progetto (Lecce)  – Rhizome Parking Garage (Online) – Studioconcreto (Lecce) – The Sunroom (Richmond) – Ultrastudio (Pescara / Los Angeles).
Artists:
Jaana-Kristiina Alakoski, Ambra Abbaticola, ASAFO Black (Nuna Adisenu- Doe, Scrapa, Jeffrey Otoo, Samuel Kortey Baah, Denyse Gawu-Mensah, Larry Bonćhaka), ASMA, Monia Ben Hamouda, Ludovic Beillard, Vitaly Bezpalov, Andrew Birk, Enrico Boccioletti, Melanie Bonajo, Benni Bosetto, Cécilia Brueil, Ian Bruner, Marco Bruzzone, Paolo Bufalini, Pierluigi Calignano, Katharina Cameron, Costanza Candeloro, Finn Carstens, Filippo Cecconi, Guendalina Cerruti, Keren Cytter, Edoardo Ciaralli, Riccardo D’avola-Corte, Stine Deja – Zoë De Luca, Maria Adele Del Vecchio, Lila De Magalhaes, Davide Dicorato, Derek M. F. Di Fabio, Alessandro Di Pietro, Neckar Doll, Loki Dolor, Don Elektro, Clementine Edwards, Kayla Ephros, Adham Faramawy, Cleo Fariselli, Emilio Ferro, Olga Fedorova, Alessandro Fogo, Léo Fourdriner, Michele Gabriele, Paolo Gabriotti, Tommaso Gatti, Diana Gheorghiu, Naomi Gilon, Marco Giordano, Nicola Gobbetto, Serena Grassi, Julie Grosche, Jennyfer Haddad, Jan S. Hansen, Philip Hinge, Helena Hladilová, Joey Holder, Ellie Hunter, Eloise Hawser, Angelique Heidler, Lena Henke, Botond Keresztesi, Keiu Krikmann, Andrea Kvas, Virginia Lee Montgomery, Per-Oskar Leu, Lucia Leuci, Abby Lloyd,  Ula Lucińska + Michał Knychaus, Lorenzo Lunghi, Tamara Macarthur, Dalia Maini, Rachele Maistrello, Viola Morini, Max Motmans, Marco Musarò, Christine Navin, Avery Noyes, Alessandro Nucci, Francesco Pacelli, Nuno Patrício, Emma Pryde, Anni Puolakka, Agostino Quaranta, John Roebas, Andrea Sala, Giulio Scalisi, Jens Settegren, Siggi Sekira, Guido Segni, Helin Shahmaran, Namsal Siedlecki, SGOMENTO (Matteo Pomati, Marco Pio Mucci), Anna Slama, Livia Spinga Mantovani, Ruben Spini, Martin Soto Climent, Mireille Tap, Filippo Tappi, Nik Timková, Philipp Timischl, Natalia Trejbalova, Marta Trektere, Urara Tsuchiya, Patrick Tuttofuoco, Eva Vallania, Daniel Van Straalen, Essi Vesala, Gaia Vincensini, Marco Vitale, Alessandro Vizzini, Gray Wielebinski, Zoë Williams, Yelena Zhelezov, Michaela Zuge-Bruton.
A bait ball occurs when small organisms (fish, birds, insects) move tightly packed in a spherical formation around a common center. It is a defensive measure adopted to escape the threat of predators, but it is also a cohesion exercise enhancing the hydro-aerodynamic functions.
A coordinated bait ball that moves and glitters in unison is a mesmerizing image; hundreds or thousands of individuals moving together under radio control or a pre-established choreography. They are even more surprising considering that there is no leader or hierarchy within them.
The “balls” are formed through that spontaneous emergency known as self-organization. It emerges from the bottom upwards, it is an a-centered and non-linear phenomenon, it is an irreversible process, which thanks to the cooperative action of subsystems lead to more complex structures in the global system.
A bait ball rotates, contracts, expands, separates and returns all one, without interruption – single individualities with a hive mind. Cohesion is achieved through the coordination of each individual with respect to the nearest neighbour. A massive coordinated “ball” is made up of thousands of individual actions that make up a single collective movement.
Heterogeneous, “aggregated” patterns in the spatial distributions of individuals are almost universal across living organisms, from bacteria to higher vertebrates. Whereas specific features of aggregations are often visually striking to human eyes, a heuristic analysis based on human vision is usually not sufficient to answer fundamental questions about how and why organisms aggregate and nor about how and why the same associative processes invest “inanimate” elements such as water vapour, sand dunes, galaxies, in which these patterns derive from simple abiotic interactions between the individual components.
The project BAITBALL follows the same natural, mutualistic and universal mechanism to create a hybrid subject/object, a collective dimension; what remains after eliminating the artificial notions of nature and culture. It emerges from the continuous articulation of humans and non-humans, artifacts, inscriptions, animals, plants, spirits, ancestors, gods, organisms and technological prostheses, local and universal, apocalyptic fears and technological hopes.
“us and our technologies in one vast system – to include human and nonhuman agency and understanding, knowing and unknowing, within the same agential soup”.
BAITBAL non è né un oggetto né un soggetto, è una relazione. E’ un fenomeno rappresentabile solo come un’interazione che permette di passare dall’”ottusità dell’io alla fluidità del noi”. Non è un punto fisso, una struttura invariante, ma un essere di circolazione che disegna una rete multicentrata. E’ un reticolo interlacciato che agisce costantemente con tutti gli altri artefici del mondo, animati e inanimati. Al suo interno, le associazioni di umani e non-umani diventano percorsi conoscitivi del mondo perché lo generano con la loro azione reciproca hic et nunc.
BAITBAL is neither an object nor a subject, it is a relationship. It is a phenomenon that can only be represented as an interaction, thus allowing to pass from the obtuseness of “I” to the fluidity of “Us”. It is not a fixed point, an invariant structure, but a circulation being that draws a multi-centric network. It is an interlaced tangle that constantly acts with all the other animated and inanimate makers of the world. Within it, human and non-human associations become cognitive paths of the world because they generate it with their mutual action, hic et nunc.
BAITBAL is a toroid, in it the energy flows from one end, circulates around the center and comes out from the other side. It is balanced, self-regulating, can sustain itself and is made of the same substance surrounding it, like a tornado, a ring of smoke in the air or a vortex in the water. The toroid allows a vortex of energy to flow outwards and then return to the vortex. Thus the energy of a BAITBALL is continually regenerated and at the same time expands self-reflecting on itself.
BAITBALL is not a macro-organism, nor a subsumption of the parts in a superior totality, but an inter-penetration of the entities, a zone of indistinction and transformation.
[…] everything is connected to something, which is connected to something else. While we may all ultimately be connected to one another, the specificity and proximity of connections matters— who we are bound up with and in what ways.
BAITBALL creates lines of growth and movement, it does not live in places but along paths: the “wayfarer” is its original condition. Its dimension is defined based on movement and relationships, its contours are so blurred that its definition becomes possible only from a contextual ecological point of view. Its environment is not simply the “thing” that surrounds it, but rather an inextricable “imbroglio” of lines, a tangle of interlaced paths.
This tangle is the texture of the BAITBALL, beings do not simply occupy the world, they inhabit it, and in so doing – in threading their own paths through the meshwork – they contribute to its ever-evolving weave. Thus we must cease regarding the world as an inert substratum.
If the modern, colonial, naturalist power/knowledge tends to contract the collective’s action in an orderly system (a structure, a chessboard, a cartography), BAITBALL instead extends the perception of reality in a multiverse made of traces, textures and weaves – from the projection of luminous imaginary chains between one star and the other, to the construction of magic seals, to chiroscopy, or to other forms of mantic. This process amplifies the original intertwining of organisms, mythologies, and ecological relationships.
BAITBALL is a place where to live together across difference. Whatever the new arrangements will bring, human exceptionalism and individualism will very likely be a difficult embarrassment for dreaming up new worlds to become-with-others.
The ecosystem that emerges from the perspective of the BAITBALL implies a reconsideration of the Darwinian theory of evolution: instead of considering separate classes as individuals, kingdoms, species, biomes, it is necessary to consider the single entities as vortices in a flow. These entities, in fact, do not exist as stable objects, but continuously mix in an unstoppable confluence of flows. BAITBALL describes a position of translation, mediation and relation that becomes the pivot of a morphological and ontogenetic model.
The view of evolution as a chronic bloody competition among individuals and species, a popular distortion of Darwin’s notion of “survival of the fittest,” dissolves before a new view of continual cooperation, strong interaction, and mutual dependence among life forms. Life did not take over the globe by combat, but by networkiing. Life forms multiplied and complexified by co-opting others, not just by killing them.”
BAITBALL is activated with what we cannot see or foresee with the unexpected, invisible, invisible consequences of collective actions, beyond the limits of the standardization of the possibility of control.
BAITBALL Identity is not an object; it is a process with addresses for different directions and so it can be fixed with a single number. BAITBALL is more like a verb. It repairs, maintains, re-creates, and outdoes itself.
BAITBALL is about love, friendship, togetherness and trust, which are always something more and always something less than awareness and knowledge.
BAITBALL is an evolutionary stage, a strategic mechanism to circumvent extinction, to lie to death.
Tools: James Bridle, Donna Haraway, Lynn Margulis, Tim Ingold, Timothy Morton, Bruno Latour, Michel Serres.