Projects:Wikified Colonial Botany

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Revision as of 11:40, 3 September 2019 by Anamertens (talk | contribs) (Installation)
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Chromolithograph by W. Koehler, after Ernst Haeckel’s 1882 painting of Nillu bushes and hanging bamboo in the highlands of Sri Lanka, printed in Haeckel’s Wanderbilder (1905) — Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Lithographs_by_Ernst_Haeckel

Description

Wikified Colonial Botany is a proposal to look for otherness in the online encyclopedia Wikipedia and its structural referent Wikidata. The otherness in this work is represented by trees. These other-than-human beings are an essential part of colonial histories, as there existed an intimate relationship between botanical science, commerce and state politics. As Londa Schiebinger and Claudia Swan state in their book 'Colonial Botany', colonial endeavours moved plants and knowledge of plants promiscuously around the world.

Non-western trees were not only moved during that period, they were also renamed by Europeans, using Linnaeus' classification system. These Latin names are still the global standard today. Their medicinal, edible and material uses were commodified. Botanical gardens were created worldwide as part of the colonial economic exploration policy.

Wikipedia is the most used online source for facts. It is multilingual, daily updated and freely available. Its pages are analysed and added as structural data in Wikidata. This data and all Wikipedia texts are worldwide an important source for developing and training new softwares that co-shape our world.

Wikified Colonial Botany shows how Wikipedia and Wikidata represent some major trees living in Latin America, Asia, Africa and Europe. By looking at their quantitative and qualitative descriptions in four different languages, Wikified Colonial Botany hopes to give a sense of how the representation of these other-than-human beings is dependent on perspectives and global relationships.


Author

Anaïs Berck is a tree greffier. She invented the word in order to integrate her activities as a nature guide, writer, artist-programmer and practitioner of meditation. Anaïs likes to explore the presence of and care for flora in the physical world, as well as in the digitized world. By combining sensorial and technical tools, she gives form to stories that live where the physical and the virtual meet.


Installation

Probably 4 x 5 posters in A3 or A4 frames.

Each series of 5 posters represents 1 tree of 1 continent with an image that scales the amount of text present on Wikipedia in a specific language. If there is no article, there will be an empty frame. Languages are: English, Spanish, French, Dutch.

The fifth frame situates the tree, its metadata on Wikidata/Wikipedia, its colonial story, a short analysis of the Wiki content & the story of the renaming.

(Re)sources

Collections: Wikidata, Wikipedia

Tools: Python, Gimp, Scribus.

Inspiration: Visits to the Botanical Gardens of Bali, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Meise.

References:

  • - Londa Schiebinger & Claudia Swan, Colonial Botany, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 2007.
  • - Patricia Fara, Sex, Botany and Empire, Icon Books, London, 2017.
  • - Guy De Kinder, ABC van het plantenlatijn: betekenis van botanische namen, Guy De Kinder, Melle, 2010.