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The E-Sylum: Volume 21, Number 5, February 4, 2018, Article 40

UKRAINIAN ARTISTS CREATE TRUMP PORTRAIT IN PENNIES

Two Ukranian artists have created portraits of Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in pennies and bullets, respectively. The Trump one is a hot potato that galleries are reluctant to exhibit for fear of controversy. -Editor

Trump Face of Money in coins portrait

“I’m rich,” Donald Trump assured crowds when he ran successfully for US president in 2016. Two Ukrainian artists have taken him at his word and created a portrait of Trump composed largely of American coins. But the artists say they have yet to find a venue willing to deal with the controversy of displaying it publicly.

The Face of Money (2017) is described by the artists Daria Marchenko and Daniel Green as “rich and cheap”. Measuring more than six feet tall, the work depicts Trump’s coppery face and hair using pocket change—pennies and nickels mostly—and a suit made of poker chips.

The portrait was shown to a select few when it was stored in a closet at the Ukrainian Institute of America, which is hosting the artists’ travelling exhibition Five Elements of War (until 6 February). The show's centrepiece is a portrait of the Russian president, Vladimir Putin made from rifle shells that were collected in the Russian-occupied eastern territories of Ukraine. A shifting spotlight in the gallery evokes different moods in Putin’s face.

“We’re talking about aggression,” Marchenko says. “The light changes. The winds change, but it doesn’t change the substance.” As for Trump, “Money is his personality,” Green says. “For Putin, it is bullets, but for Trump, it is coins.”

While their exhibition at the Ukrainian Institute was extended by two days, Marchenko and Green said they were asked to remove the Trump portrait from the building. It was moved to the Ukrainian Museum on 6th Street between 2nd and 3rd Avenue, but it did not remain there either. Both institutions cited fears of scandal, the artists say.

Face of Money is now being held at an undisclosed location in Manhattan, the artists say, but they plan to exhibit it in Los Angeles and Las Vegas this spring.

To read the complete article, see:
Trump change: Ukrainian artists unveil presidential portrait made of money (https://www.theartnewspaper.com/news/trump-change-ukrainian-artists-unveil-presidential-portrait-made-of-money)

A CNN article has more images and information about the piece. -Editor

Trump penny portrait closeup Putin portrain in bullets
LEFT: Trump portrait closeup; RIGHT: Putin portrait

The portrait of Trump took three months to make -- half the time of the Putin portrait -- as the coins were easier to work with than bullet shells. They used heat to bring out varying degrees of color in the coins, mixed with paint for Trump's famous hair.

They used casino chips for his jacket, a reflection of Trump's past as a casino magnate -- and his penchant for being a risk-taker.

Reaction to the portrait has been mixed. The Ukraine Institute in New York that is currently hosting the "Five Elements of War" exhibition said it is refusing to display the Trump portrait for fear of political reprisal. Other galleries have had a similar response, the duo said. They plan to showcase both portraits of Putin and Trump in an exhibition in Las Vegas in May.

It looks like a fine portrait if you ask me, very well done. The expression seems different based on the lighting, sometimes a smile or smirk, sometimes a scowl. Check it out in person if it gets exhibited in your town. -Editor

Artists pose with Trump penny portrait
The artists posing with the work

To read the complete article, see:
To coin a frame: A portrait of Trump, made from pennies (cnn.com/2018/02/01/politics/trump-portrait-pennies/index.html)



Wayne Homren, Editor

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