(Re)Composing

“Nature gains neither mass nor weight, but rather depth. The only dimension that really grows is the diversity of experiences: ways of feeling, modes of expression, variations of appearance, novelties in patterns and forms. Within this nature, humans are generating shallowness.” (Andreas Weber)

Interpreting the scientific process of making herbaria as a medium of representation, questioning human intervention into natural patterns — through poetic (re)composing of unexisting botanical anatomies from a single buttercup.