Trans:it. Moving Culture through Europe was an itinerant research project curated by Bartolomeo Pietromarchi as part of the Fondazione Adriano Olivetti’s programming between 2003 and 2005. Trans:it. resulted in three documentaries, The Invisible Object. Art in Social Change (2003), Ruins for the Future (2004), and Fluid Cities (2005), which summarized the field research carried out along three European itineraries. The first itinerary took place in France, Italy and the Netherlands, the second in Germany, Bulgaria, Romania and Serbia, and the third in Greece, Cyprus and Turkey. Fluid Cities received the Best Documentary Award at the Art Documentary Festival of Palazzo Venezia, Rome, 2005. The project culminated with a presentation of “NowHere Europe” exhibition held at the previously inaccessible to the public Scientific Laboratory of the Special Superintendence for the Venetian Museum of Mercy on the occasion of the 51st International Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale. The exhibition was accompanied by a publication, The (Un) Common Place. Art, Public Space and Urban Aesthetics in Europe, a series of screenings, a selection of video material from the project’s archive, and a site-specific performance by Cesare Pietroiusti, 10.000 Unique Art Works Distributed for Free.