Gordon Cheung UK, b. 1975
(30 x 19.5 x 3.2 cm)
Visually, I see this concept as a collision of organic and artificial elements: the vibrant 3d printed blooms of tulips juxtaposed with stock market lists, a matrix of financial symbols, and surreal datascapes. It reflects the layered tensions I aim to explore, where the fragility of nature clashes with the raw chaos of human economic systems. The tulip’s natural cycle of growth and decay becomes a metaphor for speculative booms and busts, a pattern we see rhyming endlessly in history, from the Dutch Golden Age to today’s Bitcoin that in a full circle twist has been accused of being a tulip bubble.
In Tulip Paradox, beauty becomes a trap, value becomes illusion, and nature becomes a stage for human folly. It reflects the fragile dance between what is real and what we choose to believe.