Press Release  March 17, 2025

New Book Explores How Botanical World Changed the Trajectory of Art

Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum, 90.PA.20

Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890), Irises, 1889. Oil on canvas, 74.3 x 94.3 cm (29 ¼ x 37 1/8 in). 

Author Giovanni Aloi delves into the interconnectedness of humanity, art, and plants

Courtesy Getty Publications

Botanical Revolutions by Giovanni Aloi book cover

LOS ANGELES, CA– Plant life is not static, nor is it separate from human life—rather, it is an ever-evolving interconnection between humans, animals, and other life forms. Plants are intimately and indissolubly bound to the earth from which they emerge. It is tempting to believe that their lives might be limited by this, that they are simpler and hence less fascinating than those of humans. But much of what plants are and do stays invisible to us or simply eludes our perception. Many plants, desired for their aesthetic beauty, sought after for their medicinal properties, harvested for their scents and flavors, or grown as essential material resources, are entwined with our existence. In art it is no different: plants have played a critical role. Yet despite their significant material and conceptual contributions, plants have been sidelined in the commentary of art historians and critics.

Botanical Revolutions (Getty Publications, $35) offers a global history of plants in art, focusing on the crucial moments that signaled the formation of new movements and styles, as well as the creation of media that could not have occurred without the involvement of and interaction with the vegetal world. This volume also employs principles central to changes in the humanities to recover and link past moments, fragments, and relations in which plants have enabled us to express our creative potential or changed the course of art by playing important roles in the advancement of movements and styles, or the invention of new media.

Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum, 84.XA.1107.6

Anna Atkins (British, 1799-1871), Lauirencia pinnatifida, 1846-47. Cyanotype. 26.4 x 21 cm (10 3/8 x 8 ¼ in.).

In this fascinating and beautifully illustrated book, author Giovanni Aloi delves deeply into the history and representation of plants in art, advocates for a change in our relationship with the botanical world, and presents an alternative history of art that foregrounds the truly indispensable contributions of plants.

Giovanni Aloi is an author, educator, and curator specializing in environmental subjects and the representation of nature in art. His previous publications include Lucian Freud Herbarium (2019), Botanical Speculations</em> (2018), and Why Look at Plants? (2018).

Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum, 82.PB.70

Jan van Huysum (Dutch, 1682-1749), Vase of Flowers, 1722. Oil on panel, 80.3 x 61 cm (31 5//8 x 24 in.). 

Publication Information:
Botanical Revolutions: How Plants Changed the Course of Art
Giovanni Aloi
Getty Publications 
224 pages, 8 x 10½ inches
172 color and 13 b/w illustrations
Hardcover
ISBN 978-1-60606-947-9
US $35 / UK £30

Media Contact:
Sydney Almaraz-Neal, Getty Publications 
(310) 440-6536
salmarazneal@getty.edu

About Getty Publications:
Getty Publications produces award-winning titles that result from or complement the work of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Conservation Institute, and Getty Research Institute. This wide variety of books covers the fields of art, photography, archaeology, architecture, conservation, and the humanities for both the general public and specialists. Publications include illustrated works on artists and art history, exhibition catalogues, works on cultural history, research on the conservation of materials and archaeological sites, scholarly monographs, critical editions of translated works, comprehensive studies of Getty's collections, and educational books on art to interest children of all ages.

Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum, 2020.5

Unknown Dutch artist, Two tulips (recto) and One Tulip (verso), ca 1633-37 (recto shown). Watercolor and wash (drawing) and ink (inscriptions) on laid paper, 17.8 x 21.6 cm (7 x 8 ½ in.).

Getty Publications 
1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 500 
Los Angeles, CA 90049-1682
USA

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