Radical Botany: The Politics of Flowers, presented from June 6 to August 22, 2026 at the Alice Austen House, examines the flower as a charged and complex subject within contemporary art. Curated by Susan Bright and Hedy van Erp, the exhibition brings together an international group of artists who use botanical imagery to address urgent social, political, and environmental concerns. What initially appears as a familiar and decorative motif quickly reveals deeper layers of meaning, linking flowers to histories of power, labor, and resistance.
The exhibition unfolds across a wide range of themes, from colonialism and migration to gender politics, class, and ecological crisis. Artists such as Kara Walker, Pipilotti Rist, and
Justine Kurland approach the subject through diverse media and strategies. Flowers appear not only as symbols but also as active materials—planted, arranged, manipulated, or left to decay—highlighting cycles of growth and decline that mirror broader social dynamics. In this context, the flower becomes a site where beauty and violence, fragility and endurance coexist.
The curators situate the exhibition within a longer historical framework, recalling moments such as the Tulip Mania, often cited as one of the first speculative market crashes. This reference underscores how flowers have long been entangled with systems of value and exchange. Today, that entanglement extends to globalized agriculture, environmental degradation, and the commodification of nature. Through these works, viewers encounter flowers not as passive objects, but as participants in complex economic and political networks.
Set within the historic home and gardens of photographer Alice Austen, the exhibition gains additional resonance. The site itself, with its layered history and emphasis on community engagement, provides a fitting backdrop for a project that bridges art, activism, and ecology.
Radical Botany ultimately challenges viewers to reconsider what flowers represent, revealing them as potent carriers of memory, identity, and resistance in a rapidly changing world.
Image:
Remsen Wolff, Fabric Frenzies from the series Rigors of Editing. 12 November 1991. Polaroid-photograph. © The Remsen Wolff Collection Amsterdam.