Abirpothi

Plants, Empire, and Everyday Intimacies

Paper gardens

Review of Paper Gardens: The Lives of Botanical Illustrations in India

Written by Os Tyagi

There is a flower shop on Fifth Avenue, near Union Square in New York. It is one of those  high-end boutique flower shops with a cool black facade and a cafe somewhere in the back.  Expensive orchids sit in the window. As a student in the city, I would often walk past it on my  way to and from classes, never bothering to go inside. 

One warm afternoon, my friend and I stopped in front of the shop to admire a thick display of  magenta bougainvilleas against the black exterior. It looked convincing at first. Then we realized it was probably plastic. 

My friend is from Greece. I am from India. Still, we both thought of home at the sight of it:  our mothers, their gardens. The bougainvillea felt synonymous with both Athens and Delhi. 

But the plant comes from elsewhere entirely. It is neither native to Greece nor India. Its  origins lie in Brazil, Argentina, and Peru. It carries the name of the eighteenth-century French  admiral Louis Antoine de Bougainville, who sailed around the world as France and Britain  competed to map and claim the South Pacific. On his expedition was the naturalist Philibert  Commerçon, who is said to have “discovered” the plant for Europe. 

A year later, James Cook arrived in Brazil on the Endeavour expedition and returned to London  with plant specimens and what is believed to be the first recorded watercolor sketch of a  bougainvillea. The drawing now sits in the collection of the Natural History Museum. Later,  cuttings travelled from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, to India. A few centuries after that,  bougainvillea became ordinary enough to grow in my mother’s garden. 

The study and illustration of plants, along with the transport of cuttings across continents,  formed part of the machinery of empire. Plants collected in India were sent to institutions like  the Natural History Museum, the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and the Royal Botanic Garden  Edinburgh. For the British, cataloguing Indian plants was largely a commercial, medicinal, and  horticultural project, with a secondary aesthetic life. Botanical illustration became a tool of  identification.

Indian artists, trained in regional painting traditions, were hired to produce these drawings.  Many were done in watercolor: delicate, exacting studies that traced a plant from seed to shoot  to flower to fruit on a single page. 

These works are collected in Paper Gardens: The Lives of Botanical Illustrations in India published  by the Museum of Art and Photography and Impart, which accompanies the ongoing  exhibition in Bangalore (on view until July 5). The book and exhibition treat these drawings not  as static records, but as documents of relationships: between artist and patron, empire and  subject, people and plants. 

This colonial project of identifying, illustrating, and transporting plants has shaped much of  everyday life. Consider the humble marigold, which accompanies so many intimate moments  in India, from festivals to weddings to death rituals. And yet the flower, too, was once a foreign  arrival, brought from Latin America sometime in the sixteenth century. 

One of the most striking sections of the book examines marigold illustrations as a study in  contrast between colonial botanical drawings and Mughal painting traditions. Colonial  botanical illustrations were standardized, with the plant isolated on the page, floating tether  less and cut off from soil, weather, landscape, and people. Mughal paintings worked differently.  They depicted cultivation, ritual, and use. In one painting, marigolds bloom across a field in  the background while people celebrate Holi in the foreground, covered in yellow and orange  dyes made from the same flower. 

Holly Schaffer’s essay explores this contrast, arguing that despite the distinct visual language of  scientific botanical illustration, these paintings also belonged to broader artistic lineages. They  were shaped not only by scientific conventions and the demands of patrons, but also by the  artists themselves and their grounding in both European and Mughal traditions. 

Henry Noltie, who has spent much of his life working with botanical archives, reflects on both  his own practice and the questions increasingly raised about archives themselves: what they  reveal and obscure about origins, authorship, power, and knowledge production. His essay  suggests that archives will always remain complex and contradictory, but that the role of the  historian and scientist is to “tell the fullest possible stories and background,” and to make them  accessible to wider audiences.

In her essay, Sumana Roy returns to Darjeeling and the rhododendrons of her childhood. From  there, she moves outward, tracing the relationship between the flower and the botanist Joseph  Dalton Hooker, one of the central figures of the colonial botanical enterprise. But her essay is  also about intimacy: the plants we grow up beside, the ones folded into memory, and what it  means to really know them. What emerges is less a history of the flower than an anatomy of  attachment, of how certain landscapes become inseparable from the self. 

Taken together, the essays create a prism through which to understand the many stories these  botanical illustrations contain. They become stories about empire, beauty, memory, labour, and  the strange journeys through which certain plants come to feel native. 

The book is beautiful simply as an object. But it also changes the way one looks at ordinary  things: the flowers and foods that seem inseparable from home, until one begins tracing how  they arrived there, and what histories travelled with them.

Os Tyagi is a researcher and writer based out of New Delhi, India. She is an art enthusiast interested in the intersection of art, politics and history. 

All image courtesy: Museum of Art and Photography

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