As I discussed in an earlier post,  I am in awe of the work of artist and architect, 
Tomas Saraceno.
My goal here is to discuss Saraceno's work in greater detail, largely by focusing on Latour's article on Saraceno, which, by definition, moves to a larger discussion of complexity art, visual complexity and complexity science in relation to the topic of globalization.
1. SARACENO'S WORK
Saraceno's work impresses me for several reasons:
First,
 it is visually very powerful.  The time involved in creating his 
networks or his geometrical shapes, for example, is incredible.  They 
are also very mathematically appealing. 
Second, like many artists today that I think of as doing some type of complexity art--from 
Benjamin Edwards to 
Julie Mehretu to 
Matthew Ritchie--he
 demonstrates through his novel visual language how macroscopic systems 
emerge through microscopic relations, in the form of what can be called 
generative art.
 In Saraceno's case, this is done through his creation of networks, 
assembled one link at a time, or through the connecting up of various 
geometrical forms.
Third, his work visually and 
metaphorically addresses--sometimes directly and other times 
indirectly--the intertwined issues of cities and sustainability, 
architecture and ecosystems, globalization and complexity and, 
ultimately, our complex interconnectedness with one another, the earth 
and the universe.  
Click, for an example, here.
Fourth,
 his work indirectly deals visually with the topic of complexity and 
complex systems.  I have not read enough about or gone through enough 
interviews with Saraceno to know how interested he is in complexity.  
But, his emphasis on visualizing networks (even in the form of spider 
webs) certainly allows for easy exegesis to the field of complexity 
science.
In fact, it is the exegetical ease of Saraceno's work that seems to have led 
Bruno Latour, the famous French scholar, to write his article 
SOME EXPERIMENTS IN ART AND POLITICS--originally, as best I can tell, published in the visual arts journal, 
e-flux.
Saraceno
 (or those working with him) must find in Latour's article a useful 
"written" narrative because they have it connected, at least on the 
internet, with several of Saraceno's shows, including his recent 
installation--
CLICK HERE--at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
I
 thought a few comments on the article, therefore, worthy, given 
Latour's reputation (e.g., his development of actor-network theory and 
his role in the sociology of science and postmodernism writ large) and 
the relevance of Latour's argument to the work many of us are doing at 
the intersection of complexity science and complexity art, particularly 
in connection to issues of globalization. 
2. LATOUR'S READING OF SARACENO
Reading
 Latour's article took me back to my 'graduate student' days when I 
first became involved in the sociology of science.  I always found 
Latour's ideas provocative; they really made me think, even though I 
went more in the direction of Michel Foucault, Richard Rorty and, 
ultimately, complexity science. 
Here is my take on the article--best, however, to read it, as it is only a few pages. (
SOME EXPERIMENTS IN ART AND POLITICS)
First,
 it must be pointed out, the article is not about Saraceno.  Instead, it
 uses Sarceno's work, along with a few others, to make a point about how
 art can help to create a new politics.
As I see it, 
Latour sees in Saraceno's art the ability to conflate science, 
philosophy and art to create room for a new form of 21st century 
politics, one Latour sees grounded in composition.  As best I can 
figure, for Latour, compositions--like those of Saraceno--are powerful 
because, in their acts of conflation, they flatten hierarchies, 
particularly those hierarchies getting in the way of us understanding 
globalization--a term Latour finds empty.
For Latour, 
the term "globalization" is empty because, in his mind, those 
articulating its theoretical frame (such as complexity scientists, 
environmentalists, etc) have yet to make a number of important moves to 
get to what, for a lack of better word, is some type of compositional, 
post-human politics.  Such a compositional, post-human politics, on the 
one hand, blurs the 'system' boundaries between social systems and 
ecosystems, human systems and animal systems, the sciences and the 
humanities; while, on the other hand, integrates the notions of 
habitation and connectedness, the local and the global. 
To
 make his argument, Latour breaks his essay into three sections.  The 
first section deals with what he calls the 'networks versus spheres' 
debate--a debate that, to my knowledge, Latour derives from his 
'reading' (translation through transportation) of the work of Peter 
Sloterdijkm.  It is this section where he talks about Saraceno's work.
The
 second section deals with the sciences versus humanities debate--again,
 Latour has a very specific view of this hierachy via his re-enactment 
of Einstein and Bergon's famous debate.  Here Latour is concerned with 
the ability of science to handle the nuances of subjectivity and the 
blurring between society and nature.  And, the third deals (via Donna 
Haraway and Isabelle Stengers) with an example of a post-human approach 
to politics, one that tries to enact an example of composition--and one 
that, it must be made clear, has nothing to do with Saraceno. 
Because my post is focused on Saraceno, my comments will focus on Latour's first section: networks versus spheres.
3. MY COMMENTS ON LATOUR
Let
 me say immediately that, overall, I think I get Latour's point.  
Dealing with the massively complex social problems facing us at the 
beginning of the 21st century requires new ways of thinking, many 
grounded in composition, collaboration, combination, assemblage, merging
 and juxtaposing differences.
However, I find that, for 
the most part, Latour has constructed a bit of a
 straw person by not 
telling us who or what group he is specifically discussing.  One cannot 
make dismissive statements about an entire field without a bit of 
evidence.  For example, unlike Latour, I think that many complexity 
scientists, specifically those working in globalization--such as 
Manuel Castells and 
John Urry--are already doing a variety of the creative compositions Latour seeks to promote.  And, as far back as 1996, 
Fritjof Capra (in his book, 
Web of Life)
 was making Latour's argument through his discussion of deep ecology (
Arne Naess) and 
ecofeminism (
Françoise d'Eaubonne), plus without all the Sloterdijk metaphorical language.  
Another example is the embodied mind work of 
Francisco Varela.  Or, how about the cutting-edge work on the sociability of bacteria being done by 
Eshel Ben-Jacob?  There is also an increasing network of artists, some of whom I have discussed on my blog (e.g., 
visual complexity, 
Benjamin Edwards to 
Julie Mehretu to 
Matthew Ritchie),
 who are blurring distinctions between society 
(socio-systems) and ecosystems, humans and animals, science and the 
humanities.  Still, to defend Latour a bit, he is right that certain 
forms of ideological or economic or environmental globalization, as 
Joseph Stigliz often critiques, remain firmly entrenched in a modernist paradigm, as one sees throughout the global banking crisis or the global warming debate.
Despite these critiques, I very much like Latour's 
descriptions of Sarceno's work.  In Section 1, Latour focuses on 
Saraceno's show, 
Galaxies Forming along Filaments, Like Droplets along the Stands of a Spider's Web.  I have read these descriptions several times and I find more in them each time.
But, even here, when Latour is discussing Saraceno, I 
find myself once again struggling.  What I do not get are the concepts 
Latour uses to make this argument.  Specifically, I have a hard time 
with the concept of spheres and other related terms (e.g., envelopes, 
etc) that Latour borrows from the German philosopher 
Peter Sloterdijk.  By using Sloterdijk's work, Latour 
translates through transport
 a series of metaphors in which I easily get lost, as I search for their
 empirical utility outside the simpler points they seem to make, which 
do not require metaphor.  Said another way, metaphor works best when one
 cannot otherwise make a point.  But, complexity science, more 
specifically, network science, already has a very good and empirically 
high-yielding vocabulary connected to method that can easily be used to 
make Latour's point.  
For example, the main concept Latour takes from Sloterdijk into the vocabulary of network science is spheres.  For Latour,
"The word “network” has become a ubiquitous designation for technical 
infrastructures, social relations, geopolitics, mafias, and, of course, 
our new life online. But networks, in the way they are usually drawn, have the great visual 
defect of being “anemic” and “anorexic,” in the words of philosopher 
Peter Sloterdijk, who has devised a philosophy of spheres and envelopes. Unlike networks, spheres are not anemic, not just points and links, but
 complex ecosystems in which forms of life define their “immunity” by 
devising protective walls and inventing elaborate systems of air 
conditioning."  
When Latour employs 
this type of metaphorical language I think to myself, 'hey, these 
spheres he talks about, they seem to be a type of weak-linked or 
strong-linked component; that is, they are networks within larger 
networks; with no hierarchical structure; where the inside of these 
networks is conditioned upon their connections to the outside.  So why 
not just say that?  Or, spheres seems to get at the idea that nodes are 
real things: people, animals, plants, buildings, social groups, 
organizations.  In other words, these nodes and their links are their own complex systems that, through 
their relationships, create the conditions in which they live, just as a small group of friends or animals or fish or plants do to help each other make it through the daily grind of life.  Again, why not just say that?
Here, yet, is another example from Latour's argument.  In the next paragraph Latour states:
 "The two concepts of networks and spheres are clearly in 
contradistinction to one another: while networks are good at describing 
long-distance and unexpected connections starting from local points, 
spheres are useful for describing local, fragile, and complex 
“atmospheric conditions”—another of Sloterdijk’s terms. Networks are 
good at stressing edges and movements; spheres at highlighting envelopes
 and wombs." 
This time, with this statement, Latour is just flat wrong.  For complexity scientists, networks
 are scientific maps that do not, unless tied to an actual set of 
geographical coordinates, have any inherent spatial meaning--in other 
words, and this is a very important point, local and global are not 
spatial concepts in networks; they are relational concepts.  Distance is
 entirely relational.  Furthermore, as I suggested above, networks do a 
very good job of highlighting boundaries and revealing the internal 
'spheres, envelopes and wombs', as Latour, pace Sloterdijk, calls them. 
 Easy examples are plant networks or friendship networks, or, perhaps, 
the 
obesity networks studied recently by Christakis and Fowler,
 which they found reveal internal groups, cliques and communities within the larger
 network, that, over time, 'wall out' or 'wall in' healthy eating or 
exercise behaviors.
I can go on, but i will stop.  I 
think I have made my point.  The metaphorical language Latour employs, 
to me, is unceessary and, in my mind, confuses things.
Again,
 having said all that, I still like Latour's article.  And, I think he 
is on much more solid ground when he focuses on describing his 
experience of Saraceno's work.  In fact, in doing so, Latour admits that
 spheres are really just networks.  See, when you look at Saraceno's 
work, Latour is right: spheres are little more than the densely 
connected sub-networks where movement along its edges "might' slow down 
due to the density of connections; but these sub-networks are 
nonetheless nested.  That is an empirical point worthy of study.  Can, 
for example, a sphere be a type of network that has a certain 
density--some sort of tipping point or threshold level--that protects the nodes in it, whatever these nodes be (fish, people, social 
groups, etc) from outside influence, as in the case of contagion spread?  Can a sphere network (for example, some type of 
socioecological complex system such as a local fishing community and all
 the living things connected to make it up) act as a wall, an immune 
system against wider movements or trends?  Or, conversely, as we see in 
poverty traps--see, for example, 
Bowles, Durlauf and Hoff--can such a density threshold 'wall-off' a community from socioeconomic well-being and improvement?  Or, is density really able to slow globalization or other processes down, or is this just a myth?
Critique aside, these are the types of things that Latour
 and Saraceno's work inspires me to think about.  And, at the end of the
 day, that is what good art (written or designed, compositional or not) 
does.