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Science/Fiction: Une non-histoire des Plantes
Victoria Aresheva/Clothilde Morette/Maison Européenne de la Photographie

216 pages
155 b/w and color images
hardcover

Leipzig October, 2025
ISBN: 9783959058575
Edition Number: 2

Width: 15 cm
Length: 23.5 cm

Language(s): French

Editor
Victoria Aresheva, Clothilde Morette, Maison Européenne de la Photographie

Author
Felix Hoffmann, Giovanni Aloi, Simon Baker, Michael Marder, Natsumi Tanaka

Designer
Natasha Agapova

From scientific discoveries to animist beliefs, from dread linked to genetic mutations to political narratives, from repulsion to fascination—plants are an inexhaustible source of stories that reveal our most intimate desires and fears. The book questions human projections and representations of the vegetal world, bringing to light the subjectivity, intelligence, and expressive abilities of plants. Lens-based images are primary witnesses to this. The publication traces a visual history of plants, linking art, technology, and science from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day, not chronologically, but through two conceptual frameworks: scientific and fictional. Bringing together more than thirty artists across different periods of time and parts of the world, it employs the logic of the science-fiction novel, taking us from a stable, identifiable world and gradually plunging us into uncertain landscapes.

Reviews

Green Intelligences: imagining the Vegetal between Photography and Science Fiction
Science/Fiction: A Non-History of Plants succeeds in extending the exhibition experience beyond its temporal and spatial limits while preserving its critical intensity. Rather than offering definitive answers, the book opens up speculative possibilities, encouraging readers to imagine new forms of coexistence with what has long been considered “other.” Dense, thought-provoking, and timely, it is a publication that continues to resonate well after the exhibition has ended.

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