Skip to content
Welcome To Our Store.
100,000+ Products for Home, Medical, Office & Classroom Needs
Search
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Why Look at Plants?: The Botanical Emergence in Contemporary Art - Paperback

$120.87 USD
$120.87 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
In stock (100 units), ready to be shipped

Available Offers

Fastest Delivery Tomorrow With Vip DealOrder within 1 hr 8 mins.

Instant 10% Discount On HDFC Banks Credit/Debit Cards EMI and CreditCard

Secure checkout with
  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Mastercard
  • PayPal
  • Shop Pay
  • Visa
  • Daily deals
  • Return policy
  • Payment method
  • Help center 24/7

Flight Range: Up to 1,000 meters (3,280 feet)

Maximum Speed: 45 kilometers per hour (28 miles per hour)

For all orders exceeding a value of 100USD shipping is offered for free.

Returns will be accepted for up to 10 days of Customer’s receipt or tracking number on unworn items. You, as a Customer, are obliged to inform us via email before you return the item.

Otherwise, standard shipping charges apply. Check out our delivery Terms & Conditions for more details.

View Product Details
Shopping cart
Product Product subtotal Quantity Price Product subtotal
Why Look at Plants?: The Botanical Emergence in Contemporary Art - Paperback
Why Look at Plants?: The Botanical Emergence in Contemporary Art - Paperback
Why Look at Plants?: The Botanical Emergence in Contemporary Art - Paperback
$120.87/ea
$0.00
$120.87/ea $0.00

Product Description

by Giovanni Aloi (Volume Editor)

Winner of the 2019 Outstanding Academic Titles award in Choice, a publishing unit of the Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL)

Why Look at Plants? proposes a thought-provoking and fascinating look into the emerging cultural politics of plant-presence in contemporary art. Through the original contributions of artists, scholars, and curators who have creatively engaged with the ultimate otherness of plants in their work, this volume maps and problematizes new intra-active, agential interconnectedness involving human-non-human biosystems central to artistic and philosophical discourses of the Anthropocene.

Plant's fixity, perceived passivity, and resilient silence have relegated the vegetal world to the cultural background of human civilization. However, the recent emergence of plants in the gallery space constitutes a wake-up-call to reappraise this relationship at a time of deep ecological and ontological crisis. Why Look at Plants? challenges readers' pre-established notions through a diverse gathering of insights, stories, experiences, perspectives, and arguments encompassing multiple disciplines, media, and methodologies.

Author Biography

Giovanni Aloi is an art historian in modern and contemporary art specializing in the representation of animals and plants in contemporary art. Aloi currently teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Sotheby's Institute of Art New York and London, and Tate Galleries. He is the Editor in Chief of Antennae: The Journal of Nature in Visual Culture (www.antennae.org.uk). He is the author of Art & Animals (2011) and Speculative Taxidermy: Natural History, Animal Surfaces, and Art in the Anthropocene (2018). With Caroline Picard, Aloi is the co-editor of the University of Minnesota Press series Art after Nature.

Number of Pages: 282
Dimensions: 0.8 x 10.2 x 7.6 IN
Publication Date: August 08, 2019
you might like