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	<title>Laird, Mark &#8211; The Bell Bookshop</title>
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	<description>Henley-on-Thames</description>
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	<title>Laird, Mark &#8211; The Bell Bookshop</title>
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		<title>The dominion of flowers</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Emma]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Sep 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[How a wave of exotic botanical imports from across Britain's empire shaped its gardens.<br>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>How a wave of exotic botanical imports from across Britain&#8217;s empire shaped its gardens and psyche</b></p>
<p> Between 1760 and 1840, exotic plants were imported from across Britain&#8217;s empire and were lavishly depicted in periodicals and scientific treatises as specimens collected alongside other objects of natural history. Mark Laird&#8217;s provocative new book-part art history, part polemic-weaves fine art, botanical illustration, and previously unpublished archival material into a political and ethical account of Britain&#8217;s heritage, showing how plants were not only integral to English gardens of the Georgian and Victorian eras but also to British culture more broadly.</p>
<p><i>The Dominion of Flowers</i> shines with captivating cross-cultural plant stories. The book opens with the Seymers&#8217; exotic <i>Butterflies and Plants</i> and Pulteney&#8217;s catalogue of Dorset&#8217;s native wildflowers. It then moves to the German artist John Miller and his illustrations for Lord Bute&#8217;s <i>Botanical Tables</i> and concludes by tracing Britain&#8217;s fascination with New Zealand&#8217;s unique flora, first depicted in Mary Delany&#8217;s collages.</p>
<p> Copiously illustrated with almost two hundred works, and drawing on Laird&#8217;s genealogical research into his own family&#8217;s colonial past, this volume foregrounds Indigenous ideas about &#8220;plant relations&#8221; in a study that brings the trans-oceanic movement of plants and people alive.</p>
<p> ?Distributed for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art</p>
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