Seis Art Wall Collection

A Living Archive of Brazil’s Native Flora.

The Seis Art Wall Collection reactivates ancestral plant knowledge through hand-painted textile art.

What is the Seis Art Wall Collection?

The Seis Art Wall Collection is a contemporary textile series that reactivates the botanical and cultural memory of six sacred plant species, each representing one of Brazil’s major biomes: the Amazon, Cerrado, Caatinga, Atlantic Forest, Pantanal, and Pampas.

Far more than biological specimens, these plants are understood as carriers of ancestral knowledge, symbols of resilience, and sentient archives of the landscapes they inhabit.

Each holds a distinct place at the intersection of botanical science and Indigenous, Afro-Brazilian, and rural knowledge systems—embodying centuries of healing, meaning-making, and spiritual relation.

In this collection, Botanica Brasilis invites viewers to encounter plants not as static representations, but as messengers of the land—revealing how the Earth transmits wisdom not only through growth and bloom, but through silence, endurance, and sacred cycles of time.

Meet The Six Plants

Green leaves and clusters of red berries on a plant.
Bright yellow flowers blooming on a tree with green leaves against a clear blue sky.
A tall cactus with green stems and sharp spines, featuring large white flowers with red accents blooming from it.
Close-up of flowering plant with white petals and long red stamens surrounded by green leaves.
Pink orchids growing on a tree trunk.
A large cluster of green palm trees with fan-shaped leaves against a bright sky.

Living Threads of a Fragile Earth.

In an era of accelerating climate crisis and biodiversity loss, the Seis Art Wall Collection emerges not merely as an aesthetic gesture, but as a call to reconnection—an invitation to remember our place within the living systems we have long forgotten.

This series of six hand-painted textile works is rooted in Brazil’s native flora and the biocultural memory it carries. Each plant depicted is both species and symbol: a keeper of ecological knowledge, spiritual continuity, and the ancestral teachings held within forests, rivers, and soil.

To protect these plants is to safeguard more than biodiversity—it is to uphold the knowledge systems that have long regarded plants as teachers, not resources.

Through the language of linen and pigment, the Seis Art Wall Collection restores relational ways of seeing. These are not illustrations; they are living archives. They speak of reciprocity, resistance, and resilience.

Indigenous and traditional communities in Brazil have long walked in respectful relationship with these plant beings—listening to their rhythms, learning their medicines, and honouring their roles as guardians of balance. Their continued survival carries not only ecological significance but cultural sovereignty.

Let these plants remind us: When we care for the Earth—and listen deeply to those who have always known how— we do not only protect landscapes.

We begin to repair the future.