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Allium Ampelofrasum, 2022
Alstromeria III, 2023
Spathiphyllum, 2023
Gerbera Jamesonii Ms Daisy, 2022
Anthurium Andraenum, 2022
Celosia Cristata II, 2023
Nigella Damascena, 2022
Chysanthemum, 2023
Clematis Integrifolia, 2022
Daucus Carota II, 2002
Echinea III, 2025 
Daucus Carota, 2022
Gerbera Hybrida II, 2023
Gladiolus, 2023
Helianthus, 2022
Gomphocarpus Physocarpus, 2023
Jasminum Polyanthum, 2022
Paenoia Lactiflora, 2022
Papaver Nudicale, 2022
Peonies, 2022
Protea Cynariods, 2022
Rudbeckia Hirta , 2025
Brassica Oleracea, 2023
Amaranthus Cruentus, 2023
Celosia Cristata, 2023
Tulipa Gesneriana, 2023
Cynara Scolymus, 2022
Tulipa, 2023
Red Lilium, 2022
Ranunculus Asiaticus, 2022
Dahlia Pinnata, 2023
Banksia Integrifola, 2023
Queen Protea, 2023
Gomphocarpus Physocarpus, 2023
Red Lilium II, 2022
Helleborus Orientalis, 2023

Press Release

Joseph Bellows Gallery is pleased to present an online exhibiton of Tine Poppe's highly celebrated series, Gilded Lilies.  Although mystifyingly beautiful, these lush, supernatural flower arrangements also pose important environmental and climate concerns.  The artist's cut flowers were shot against a background of images from vulnerable areas of the world. When giving these magnificent flowers and plants close attention, they become a mysterious, dreamlike universe in themselves and a reminder of the incredible beauty of nature that we are at serious risk of losing. 

Today, most of the cut flowers we buy have been transported by plane and truck from industrial-scale, digitally-run greenhouses around the world. Colombia, Ecuador, and equatorial East Africa are the world's largest producers of cut flowers. These greenhouses contribute to high water use and chemical runoff. In addition to pollutants and water use, flowers can generate significant carbon emissions due to refrigeration and long-haul transportation. Stems may be transported up to 6000 miles in refrigerated airplane holds. When grown in cooler climates, flowers often require heated greenhouses, which generate high CO2 emissions due to their high electricity consumption. 

The images remind us of both the beauty of their subject and how flowers are imbued with specific, symbolic meaning. 

Tine Poppe is an artist living and working in Oslo, Norway. Her practice focuses on bringing attention to social, political, existential, and environmental issues through photography. In doing so, her work has been published and exhibited in prominent publications, photography magazines, and exhibitions worldwide. Her works have been purchased by both governmental and corporate art collections in Norway and abroad. The Sony World Photography Awards have recognized Poppe's work, as have the IPA International Photography Awards, PX3 Prix de la Photographie Paris, LensCulture Emerging Talents Awards, and LensCulture Street Photography Awards, among others. Her work is featured in the books “The Best of LensCulture Vol. 1 and Vol. 2”. She was recently awarded the prestigious Norwegian award, Fotografiprisen.