The Austrian philosopher Ivan Illich defines the convivial society as one where people—integrated into community life—can socially produce ways of being based on autonomy, relational freedom and joy as creative powers. It is also a social structure where plurality and balance of life are at the center of realizable utopias, enabling us to practice interdimensional justice, power distribution and recognize our ability to learn from everyday life. This exhibition is a critical, affective and intercultural reflection that is woven from different spaces-times, places where experiences with inhabitants, collectives and original nations have led us to learn other ways of being, existing and inhabiting the world; to create collaboratively ways of producing the habitat where care for life and common well-being are both the means and ends of our togetherness.