New Straits Times

‘WORTHLESS’ BOLIVAR FINDS NEW VALUE

Venezuelan­s make ‘money art’ out of small bills that are ‘no good to buy anything’

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VENEZUELA’S currency has lost so much value that people simply throw away their small bills — they are virtually worthless anyway.

Enter Wilmer Rojas, 25, who scoops them up off the street, uses an origami-like folding technique, a needle and thread to make handbags with an eye to selling them — maybe even abroad, where people have real money.

Rojas can use as many as 800 bills to make such a purse. And if you add up the face value of all that money, it’s enough to buy... half a kilogramme of rice. Rojas and his wife have three kids to feed, and another is on the way.

“People throw them away because they are no good to buy anything. No one even accepts them any more,” said Rojas outside a subway station, where he also sells coffee and cigarettes in addition to his unusual bag-weaving work.

Meanwhile, inflation in this oilrich, cash-poor economy churns on and on: since August, the bolivar has lost 87 per cent of its value against the euro.

Inflation this year is forecast by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) to come in at a staggering 13,000 per cent.

With two-, five- and 10-bolivar notes, “you can’t even buy a piece of candy”, said Rojas, explaining how he used 400 such bills to make a smaller handbag.

Rojas then points to a queen’s crown he made out of bolivar notes.

“Here there are about 50,000 bolivars, which is maybe enough for a pack of cigarettes.”

Rojas said he learned his craft from another makeshift artist.

“You can use magazine paper or newspaper pulp, but currency notes are better because they are not worth anything, they are all the same size and you don’t have to waste time cutting them.”

He hopes to start selling his creations soon. But he fears Venezuela’s economic crisis may foil his plans.

“Here, people barely have enough to put food on the table and are not going to shell out money for something that required a lot of work,” he said.

In downtown Caracas, other hungry artisans are selling woven bags like these. They get as much as 300,000 bolivars for one of them. That will buy you a kilogramme of meat.

Economist Tamara Herrera said the fact that Venezuela’s currency was now used as play money was the maximum expression of how much value it has lost.

With 1,000 two-bolivar notes that nobody wants, Jose Leon, a 26-year-old designer, began a protest on Instagram in 2016 that featured doctored notes and the hashtag #venezuelad­evaluada, or devalued Venezuela.

Deadpool, the anti-hero in the Marvel comics, was the inspiratio­n for his first work on currency notes, using his face to replace that of independen­ce hero Simon Bolivar.

Leon has also drawn the faces of “Star Wars” characters over that of Bolivar and other famous Venezuelan­s pictured on the notes.

Leon’s customers live abroad and pay him up to US$20 (RM79) per piece of “money art”.

“With a bit of Wite-Out and some pens, I can raise the value of the currency by nearly 5,000 per cent,” said Leon at his workshop in San Cristobal, a city on the border with Colombia.

Leon is doing well with his art. But Rojas is still struggling to make money — in the meantime, he is using notes to make a carnival costume for his daughter.

“These things are no good for buying anything. At least I am putting them to good use rather than throwing them away,” said Rojas.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Venezuelan illustrato­r Jose Leon with his artworks painted on devalued bolivar bills at his workshop in San Cristobal, Venezuela.
AFP PIC Venezuelan illustrato­r Jose Leon with his artworks painted on devalued bolivar bills at his workshop in San Cristobal, Venezuela.
 ?? AFP PIC ?? A queen’s crown made by Wilmer Rojas out of bolivar banknotes in Caracas.
AFP PIC A queen’s crown made by Wilmer Rojas out of bolivar banknotes in Caracas.

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