In The Cultivar Series, Uli Westphal Gets to the Root of Crop Diversity, Agricultural Modification
Back in 2010, artist Uli Westphal took an interest in the ways farming and cultivation were affecting the availability of certain plants after a visit to VERN e.V. The German nonprofit cares for thousands of specimens, makes obscure or rare varieties available to the public, and is also a regional network of gardeners, farmers, and local garden sites. They have a large garden plot in a tiny village two hours north of Berlin, where they grow a kaleidoscope of rare and forgotten crop varieties, he shares. I walked into a greenhouse full of tomato plants bearing fruits that I had never seen in my life.
This encounter prompted whats become a years-long project of documenting the planets incredible agricultural diversity. Encompassing both the wild and the domestic, Westphals ongoing and endless Cultivar Series illuminates a vast array of specimens through striking flat-lay photos. Fruits, vegetables, legumes, and other produce arranged by color capture the breadth of the worlds crops, comparing their shapes, sizes, and molecular makeuphigher levels of chlorophyll promote the verdant pigments of leafy greens, for example, while carotenoids are responsible for bright orange carrots.
From Amsterdam and Potsdam, Germany, to Mexico City and Tucson, the sources of Westphals subject matter are broad, with some fare coming fully grown from farmers and others as seeds to be cultivated. Cucumis sativus I features fifty cucumber varieties the photographer grew in a greenhouse once connected to his Berlin-based studio from seeds gifted by a Dutch organization, for example, while the pumpkins and peppers in two of his other works were a collaboration with Peaceful Belly Farm in Boise, Idaho.
Whether depicting potatoes or pears, the images offer a rare glimpse of species that often arent available in the grocery store or markets. Since the industrialization of agriculture, our focus has shifted to only a few modern, high-yielding, robust, good looking, uniform, and predictable varieties. This change has led to the displacement of traditional crop varieties, Westphal writes, noting that when a plant isnt actively cultivated, it often falls under threat of extinction, and such strains tend to be protected by conservation organizations like the seed banks hes collaborated with in the past. A majority of all varieties developed by humans have already become extinct during the last 50 years. With them, we not only lose genetic diversity but also a living cultural and culinary heritage.
https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2022/10/uli-westphal-cultivar-series/
Three photos from The Cultivar Series are on view as part of the group exhibition Food in New York through September 30, 2023, at the Museum of the City of New York, and Westphal is currently working to document the worlds edible plants, of which hes culled a shortlist of 3,000 species. Prints of his flat lays are available on his site, along with similar collections centered on fruits and other consumables, and you can follow his practice on Instagram. (via Present & Correct)