Life(s) of webs by Tomás Saraceno

Published April 11, 2025
Contributed by Ethan Nakache


Lola Giffard Bouvier. License: All Rights Reserved.


The book Life(s) of webs: arachnophobias, arachnophilias, and other stories was published in conjunction with the permanent installation of the same title by Tomás Saraceno in the Church of the Madonna del Carmine, part of the National Museums of Matera, Italy.

NERO Editions comments:

It features essays discussing the role of spider/webs in different cultures from an inter-species perspective and a section with color images dedicated to the work in Matera.

From Saraceno’s introduction:
“I have always been completely fascinated by spider/webs. Partly growing up in Italian exile, perhaps it was their ability to make a home anywhere and with materials they carry with them, inside, that so captivated me. Their webs have often been used as an analogy between the cosmic and the terrestrial webs of life, and continue reverberating inside me. Sometimes you can barely see them, and yet they contain a whole world, expressing the immense wisdom accumulated from hundreds of millions of years of life on Earth.
Arachnophobia has therefore also always been a great mystery to me. How could anyone fear this small, incredibly sophisticated being? These questions have led me on a path to connect with other people and cultures like myself—of whom there are many, across the globe and throughout time—who do not abhor spiders, but respect them—in some cases, even worship them.”




Lola Giffard Bouvier. License: All Rights Reserved.


Lola Giffard Bouvier. License: All Rights Reserved.


Lola Giffard Bouvier. License: All Rights Reserved.


Lola Giffard Bouvier. License: All Rights Reserved.


Lola Giffard Bouvier. License: All Rights Reserved.

This post was originally published at Fonts In Use
WRITTEN BY

FontsInUse

An independent archive of typography.