Plant Life: Exploring Vegetal Worlds in the Harn Museum Collection
August 3, 2021 – February 20, 2022
Plants accompany every aspect of human life. We breathe in the oxygen they breathe out, we eat them (or we eat animals that eat them), we wear them, we make our dwellings and furnishings from them, we kill them when they are inconvenient to us. Eighty percent of the Earth’s biomass is composed of living plant material; living human bodies make up less than two-tenths of one percent. Ironically, the incomprehensible abundance of plants may explain our propensity to “plant blindness,” a term coined in 1998 by botanists James H. Wandersee and Elisabeth E. Schussler to describe modern humans’ casual inattention to plants’ foundational roles in the biosphere and their influences on human culture.
Each of the 13 works featured in Plant Life was chosen because something in it provokes critical reflection on the strange entanglements of humans and plants. In these works, plants are more than props: they are—openly or cryptically—also made present to us in their own way. They show that it is possible to see our photosynthetic kin as they really exist, in this exhibition, throughout the museum, and in the world outside: as vitally, expressively, insistently with us.
Curated by Terry Harpold, Associate Professor of English, University of Florida, and the graduate students enrolled in his Spring 2021 seminar Critical Plant Studies: Ryan Bedsaul, Anwesha Chattopadhyay, Anna Grzybowska, Jacob Hawk, Olivia Ivings, Kevin McKenna, Elizabeth Nichols, Erick Verran, Peter Vertacnik, and Janice Whang.
Expand to read the exhibition descriptionClick here to read the extended essays, each written on one of the works in the exhibition.
Programs - see Plant Life.
Image Credits:
Kenneth A. Kerslake. Tree Dreams. c. 1975
Screen print
1992.7.55
Gift of Sarah A. and Kenneth A. Kerslake
Kuba Artist, Lidded Cosmetic Box. c. 1950
Wood, traces of pigment
2004.37.8
Gift of Rod McGalliard
Maggie Taylor. One and a Half Sisters. 2003
Pigment inkjet print I
2006.43
Gift of Thomas W. Southall