Copy to Clipboard. Add italics as necessaryCite as: Miriam Oesterreich, Branching Out: Botanical Metaphors and Worlding Art History from the ‘Tropics’, Worlding Public Cultures (Berlin: ICI Berlin Press, 2025) <https:/​/​doi.org/​10.37050/​wpc-ca-05>

Branching Out

Botanical Metaphors and Worlding Art History from the ‘Tropics’

Miriam Oesterreich

Berlin: ICI Berlin Press, 2025
Cover design: Studio Bens based on a photograph of a banana plant from Costa Rica, 14.7 x 24.3 cm. Photo: The Bookworm Collection / Alamy Stock Photo.
Cover design: Studio Bens based on a photograph of a banana plant from Costa Rica, 14.7 x 24.3 cm. Photo: The Bookworm Collection / Alamy Stock Photo.

This chapbook examines the aestheticization of plants in colonial discourses and charts visualizations of art histories that use the tree as a metaphor. In doing so, Miriam Oesterreich considers how ‘tropicalized’ tree forms have been reappropriated to portray a more ‘worlded’ art history. In the mid-twentieth century, prominent visual artists including Miguel Covarrubias, Alfred Barr, and Ad Reinhardt featured trees of art as canonizing illustrations of Western art history. Using Pablo León de la Barra’s poster Diagrama Tropical/Nova Cartografia Tropical (2010) as a starting point Branching Out discusses works by contemporary artists from Latin America and the Caribbean to look at the subversive potential in reimagining plant images and metaphors.

ISBN 978-3-96558-073-2 | Paperback | 12 EUR | v, 82 pp. | 16 colour images | 17.8 cm x 12.7 cm

ISBN 978-3-96558-074-9 | PDF | Open Access | 16 colour images | 16 MB

ISBN 978-3-96558-075-6 | EPUB | Open Access | 16 colour images | 17 MB

Worlding Public Cultures
ISSN (Print): 2939-9211
ISSN (Online): 2939-922X

DOI: https://doi.org/10.37050/wpc-ca-05