Here is an inherent abjection of the feminine floral form, beauty suspended in utter absentia. When the amorphophallus titanum compromises beauty for odor, it occupies the space between the ideal ...
It's been a great Canberra celebrity: the smelly 10-year-old corpse flower has attracted more than a thousand admiring visitors to its tropical glasshouse in the National Botanic Gardens.
The corpse flower, also known by its scientific name amorphophallus titanium, bloomed for the first time in its 15 years at Canberra’s Australian National Botanic Gardens on Saturday and was ...
The corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum) is famous not only for its size but also for the stench of rotting flesh it releases when it blooms. Sydney’s famous corpse flower, Putricia, drew a crowd of ...
The corpse flower blooms for the first time in its 15 years at Canberra's Australian National Botanic Gardens.
People gather around a corpse flower that begins to bloom at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Sydney, Australia ... Australian capital Canberra for the third flowering of the amorphophallus titanum in ...
The corpse flower, also known by its scientific name amorphophallus titanum, or titan arum ... Another flowered briefly in the Sydney Royal Botanic Gardens in late January, attracting 20,000 ...