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HomeBAWW Exhibition 2025

Botanical Art Worldwide 2025

A More Abundant Future: Diversity in Garden, Farm, and Field


Host venue: Foundry Art Centre, St. Charles, MO

April 4 - May 24, 2025

The Exhibition
Call for Entries
The Theme

VENUE

Host venue: Foundry Art Centre

St. Charles, MO

April 4 - May 24, 2025

©2020 Sengmany Phommachakr, Long Pie Pumpkin, watercolor on paper, 28-1/8 x 20-5/8 inches

The second Botanical Art Worldwide Project will focus on and celebrate biodiversity in the crops that have been closely associated with the human species over thousands of years. The theme is designed to draw attention to the vast variety of food and useful plants available, in contrast with the relatively few varieties currently used in mass cultivation. Plants eligible for inclusion are those cultivated for food, textiles, building, energy, and medicine.

Currently, many heritage species and varieties are only cultivated in small quantities by specialist growers on a limited scale. It is vital to promote this genetic diversity in a world challenged by a growing population, changing climate, and habitat losses. Keep an eye on this site for the upcoming call for entries.

Eligible Subjects
Possible subjects include heritage plant cultivars developed by traditional means (selection, hybridization, and propagation) and their wild relatives, as well as ancient heritage crops being brought back into cultivation. 

HERITAGE CROPS: Crops that are not used in modern, large scale monocultural agriculture. Crops chosen should have been in cultivation for a minimum of 50 years.

CROP WILD RELATIVES: Wild species that can be hybridized with cultivated crops to impart a new characteristic to the cultivated crop, or that are foraged wild plants.

ANCIENT CROPS: Those that have been cultivated for hundreds or thousands of years in the same form.






Botanical Art Worldwide - 2025


Following a recent meeting, the Botanical Art Worldwide - Steering Committee has agreed upon a theme for its next worldwide exhibition, set to launch in 2025. The chosen theme is: Crop Diversity.

More detailed information on the project will be provided as it becomes available but a summary has been produced to initiate this exciting project.

Introduction

The proposed 2025 exhibition will focus on and celebrate biodiversity in the crops that have been closely associated with the human species over thousands of years. The theme is designed to draw attention to the vast variety of food and useful plants available, in contrast with the relatively few varieties currently used in mass cultivation. Plants eligible for inclusion are those cultivated for food, textiles, building, energy, and medicine. Currently, many heritage species and varieties are only cultivated in small quantities by specialist growers on a small scale. It is vital to promote this genetic diversity in a world challenged by a growing population and a changing climate.

Major Themes

Possible subjects include heritage plant cultivars developed by traditional means (selection, hybridization, and propagation) and their wild relatives, as well as ancient heritage crops being brought back into cultivation. Plants eligible for inclusion are those cultivated for food, textiles, building, energy, and medicine.

Subjects include:

HERITAGE CROPS
Crops that are not used in modern, large scale monocultural agriculture. Crops chosen should have been in cultivation for a minimum of 50 years.

CROP WILD RELATIVES
Wild species that can be hybridized with cultivated crops to impart a new characteristic to the cultivated crop, or that are foraged wild plants.

ANCIENT CROPS
Those that have been cultivated for hundreds or thousands of years in the same form.

Extended Definition of Eligible Subjects

HERITAGE / HEIRLOOM CROPS
- Anything grown for food on your table, from rice, corn, wheat, quinoa, and lemongrass, to potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, squash, and eggplants, to beverages like tea and coffee and spices like saffron, vanilla, allspice.
- Heritage crops cultivated for energy, clothing, shelter, and medicine are also eligible. This includes early progenitors of utilitarian species, such as cotton, flax, linseed.

CROP WILD RELATIVES
- Wild plants that are related to important food and utilitarian crops and can be used in hybridization to increase resistance to disease or impart another important characteristic. A few examples are: wild grapes, coffee species, wild millet, wild potato or tomato species, sunflowers, bananas, wild rice.
- Wild edible foods that are foraged. For example, plums, finger lime, coconut, wild berries, and lilly pilly fruit. More than a third of wild fruit and veg relatives require urgent conservation according to the Crop Trust. https://www.croptrust.org/news center/

ANCIENT CROPS
- Crops that have been cultivated for hundreds or thousands of years. For example, some varieties of sorghum, farro wheat, barleys, cowpea, and nuts.
- This category also includes foods cultivated, gathered, and selected by indigenous people around the world: taro, maize, amaranth, pumpkin, and many others.

Definition of Terms

Biodiversity: the number and types of plants and animals that exist in an area or across the world.

Heirloom/heritage: old cultivar of a plant grown and used historically but generally not used in wide scale crop production. Selection: choosing plants with (generally) desirable characteristics for propagation.

Cultivar: type of plant bred for desired traits

Hybridization: the process of producing plants from two different plants

Propagation: producing a new plant from a parent plant

Mutation: the way in which genes change to produce permanent differences.

Sport : a naturally occurring genetic mutation in a portion of a plant that causes it to exhibit a different and desirable trait. This part is then propagated to retain those characteristics.

Other

Each participating country has a preference for crops that are grown there now, no matter where they may have originated.

More specific criteria will be published in the near future.

Contact

Each participating country will promote contact details as they become available and this will be published through the local coordinating botanical art association(s).

More information will be published as it becomes available including a list of participating countries and botanical art associations.    
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