Albuquerque Journal

CAPITAL GAINS

‘Currency’ explores complicate­d relationsh­ip with money

- BY KATHALEEN ROBERTS ASSISTANT ARTS EDITOR

In 1896, the Arctic explorer Robert Peary discovered a 31-ton meteorite guarded by Greenland’s Inuit people. The iron rock crashed into the ice nearly 10,000 years earlier. The indigenous people worked its sacred metal for tools.

Peary took the meteorite and sold it to New York’s Museum of Natural History. But he didn’t stop there. He also took six Native people for display with him, five of whom quickly died of tuberculos­is. Museum curators skinned the corpses and displayed the skeletons. A little boy named Minik survived to see the exhibition, not realizing his father’s bones were part of the show.

Albuquerqu­e artist Nina Elder transforme­d that horrific history into “Saviksoah Meteorite, Intact” (2018), with charcoal and pulverized meteorite on paper. The drawing is part of “Currency,” opening at 516 ARTS on Saturday with works by more than 130 artists and collective­s. The exhibition explores our relationsh­ip with money and what we value.

“‘Capital’ is a term that can be used in different ways,” said exhibit co-curator Manuel-Julian Montoya, an associate professor at the University of New Mexico’s Anderson School of Management. “What’s the difference between a priceless object and a worthless object?”

Elder began researchin­g the Greenland meteorite about a year ago through conversati­ons with indigenous leaders.

“All of the cultural leaders I talked to, they all talked about the void that was left behind,” she said.

The artist created her drawing from a historic photograph, slicing what had been the meteor’s shape into blank space. She ordered pulverized meteorite for her drawing from NASA. It was free.

The call “was almost a joke,” she said, “because I considered it something precious. Now it’s scientific currency.”

Bernalillo’s Scott Greene painted one of his trademark trash mountains in “Mountsanto,” an oil on canvas from 2018.

The painting began 10 years ago as “Sermon on the Mount.” Today it pictures a mountain of sheep, discarded tires, a tractor spewing pesticides, a satellite dish and other discards from 21st century life.

The artist lives on part of what was once the largest sheep ranch in this part of the country.

“There’s still farming going on here,” the artist said.

Greene is no fan of biotechnol­ogy. Monsanto has been criticized for the potential health effects of its pesticides and for creating what some consider a seed monopoly.

“Monsanto’s pretty much got its tentacles in just about everything,” he said. “They’re a monopoly; they’re making it so farmers can’t grow their crops alone anymore.

“How far from reality is this? We see the wit and satire and hyperbole, but is it really?

“We value the dollar more than the environmen­t. It’s the reality that is upside-down.”

Albuquerqu­e artist Leonard Fresquez organized an installati­on with 20 artists producing knock-off versions of prestige items such as Nike shoes and designer handbags.

“We live in a society where populism is king,” Montoya said. “It’s the difference between a person who reads novels and a person who reads a Twitter feed.”

Los Angeles artist (and onetime

Beverly Hills nanny) Ramiro Gomez crafted cardboard cutouts of maids dressing a reproducti­on of a young girl from Velasquez’s famous painting “Las Meninas” (“The Ladies-in-Waiting”). Velasquez was the leading artist of the Spanish Golden Age.

Gomez placed the figures in front of an intricatel­y gated Bel Air mansion.

“So how do we rate time and labor and work?” exhibition co-curator Josie Lopez asked. “How many people does it take to support the privilege of this individual?”

The New York Occupy Museums collective’s ongoing “Debtfair” campaign provided some inspiratio­n for “Currency,” Lopez said. Sprung from the Occupy Wall Street movement, the collective asked New Mexico artists how debt affects them and their art.

Literary critic Mikhail Bakhtin described the concept of the carnival as a subversive, disruptive event in which the hypocrisy of everyday life was unmasked. In “Currency,” artists turn assumption­s upside down to re-examine our relationsh­ip with money.

 ?? COURTESY OF 516 ARTS ?? “Las Meninas, North Fairing Road, Bel Air,” 2018, archival pigment print by Ramiro Gomez and David Feldman.
COURTESY OF 516 ARTS “Las Meninas, North Fairing Road, Bel Air,” 2018, archival pigment print by Ramiro Gomez and David Feldman.
 ??  ?? “Mountsanto,” 2018 oil on canvas on panel by Scott Greene.
“Mountsanto,” 2018 oil on canvas on panel by Scott Greene.
 ??  ?? “Foreign Developmen­t Assistance (detail: German Specimen Butterfly,” 2017, hand-painted, cutout butterfly prints on archival cotton paper, UV varnished, mounted on acrylic rods by Erika Harrsh.
“Foreign Developmen­t Assistance (detail: German Specimen Butterfly,” 2017, hand-painted, cutout butterfly prints on archival cotton paper, UV varnished, mounted on acrylic rods by Erika Harrsh.
 ??  ?? “Saviksoah Meteorite, Intact, 1986,” 2018, charcoal and pulverized meteorite on paper by Nina Elder.
“Saviksoah Meteorite, Intact, 1986,” 2018, charcoal and pulverized meteorite on paper by Nina Elder.
 ?? COURTESY OF 516 ARTS ?? “The New Bootlegger­s,” 2018, mock-up for installati­on featuring 21 artists by Leonard Fresquez.
COURTESY OF 516 ARTS “The New Bootlegger­s,” 2018, mock-up for installati­on featuring 21 artists by Leonard Fresquez.
 ?? COURTESY OF 516 ARTS ?? “Wealth or Happiness,” 2012, aluminum, neon, enamel, electronic­s, antique knife switch by Steve Lambert.
COURTESY OF 516 ARTS “Wealth or Happiness,” 2012, aluminum, neon, enamel, electronic­s, antique knife switch by Steve Lambert.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States