Leigh Merill
Collected Forest: Burned Cedar
Archival pigment print of a digital photo collage
93 x 83 cm
Ed. 2/3 +1A.P.
USA 2022
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Elizabeth Chiles
Meadow 29
Archival Pigment Print on Hahnemühle Rice Photo Fiber
115 x 95
6/9 +2A.P.
USA, 2025
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Elizabeth Chiles
Meadow 29
Archival Pigment Print on Hahnemühle Rice Photo Fiber
180 x 102 cm.
2/5 +2A.P.
USA, 2025
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Tiago Valente
Cartografía Muxe:
La Vela
Archival pigment inkjet print photography on Hahnemühle Cézanne 100% cotton canvas hand-embroidered by the artist in silk yarn.
Ed. 3 + 2 A.P.
50 x 70 cm.
Spain-México 2025
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Shibu Arakkal
Untitled 2021 (Arbor)
Three Archival Pigment Prints Moanted in aluminium, floated on cotton in a natural wooden frame with museum glass front
137 x 61 cm
Ed. 3 + 2 A.P.
2021-2026
India
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Shibu Arakkal
Untitled 2017 (Arbor)
Three Archival Pigment Prints Moanted in aluminium, floated on cotton in a natural wooden frame with museum glass front
137 x 50 cm
Ed. 3 + 2 A.P.
2017-2026
India
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Luvia Lazo
Flores de mamá
Archival pigment print on cotton
61 x 51 cm.
Ed. 9 + 2 A.P.
Mexico 2025
Approximate view with unframed print. Ask for exact available dimensions
Shibu Arakkal, India. Persia Campbell, México. Elizabeth Chiles, USA.
Tyler Goldflower, USA. Luvia Lazo, Mexico. Leigh Merrill, USA.
Lux Plantae brings together a curation of contemporary artistic productions that use photography as a visual arts tool. These works feature elements starring the plant kingdom reworked, randomized, deconstructed, or reimagined in visual compositions that shift the image beyond its strictly photographic function, expanding it exuberantly.
More than just documenting flora, these works invite us to reflect on the very process of imagining, that is, of creating images; as it seems also does the Mexican Nobel laureate in literature, Octavio Paz, in his poem Inside Tree:
A tree grew on my brow.
It did grow inward.
Its roots are veins,
nerves its limbs,
its confused foliage thoughts.
Your glances lighters it,
and its fruits of shadows
are oranges of blood,
grenadiers of fire…
There inside, in my brow,
the tree speaks.
Get closer, do you hear it?*