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The E-Sylum: Volume 27, Number 20, May 19, 2024, Article 27

DONALD AND ERA FARNSWORTH DOLLARS

  mona lisa dollar

Gerry Tebben writes:

"A little easter egg is in The Washington Post this weekend. A photo in the story "Book Tour: At home with Amor Towles" has what appears to be a Donald and Era Farnsworth Mona Lisa dollar on a bookshelf in front of a 1931 encyclopedia. The couple uses real bills for their artwork, avoiding the Boggs counterfeiting problem. Sadly, the article makes no mention of the bill, but it's an illuminating look at the author's bookshelf."

To read the complete article, see:
Book Tour: At home with Amor Towles (https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/interactive/2024/book-tour-home-with-amor-towles/)

Thanks. There seems to be a second dollar pictured at the upper left of the photo.

I wasn't aware of the Mona Lisa dollar or Donald and Era Farnsworth. Here's some more information. -Editor

Using actual dollar bills as the physical foundation for each work, the artists satirize, ponder and comment upon the monetary system, politics, art, and the ties between corporations and the economy. Look closely, as there are many details, visual quips, and quotes from artists and other broad-minded thinkers. Clearly, the Farnsworths are on a roll and having a good time with this ongoing series.

Artist's statement:

One of the most beloved but lesser-seen treasures at Magnolia Editions, secreted away in an unassuming flat file, is the late conceptual artist Chris Burden's Diecimila, a color photo etching depicting an Italian banknote with criminally perfect precision and printed at Crown Point Press in 1977 on a sheet of handmade Donald Farnsworth paper, complete with an approximation of the official watermark. Having worked on Diecimila has served as an inspiration to us over the years, just as U.S. paper currency has served as an aspirational challenge to printmakers ever since the dollar bill's original engraving was designed in 1929. After all, the basic concerns of the Bureau issuing currency are fundamentally identical to those of any fine art intaglio printmaker, from questions of registration, engraving, and ink additives on down to the molecular composition of the fibers in the paper. As Jonathon Keats details in Forged: Why Fakes Are The Great Art Of Our Age, artists including Ed Kienholz and J.S.G. Boggs have advanced projects further obscuring the line between printing art and printing money, breaking out of the museum-gallery complex [and] leveraging the absurdity of art to question the sanity of finance.

Working with Enrique Chagoya at Magnolia Editions in 2004, the dollar's design became the basis for a series of prints and projects satirizing the Bush-Cheney administration's fiscal policies and the economic disaster that followed. This prompted discussions about the transition in our lifetime from a bill backed by precious metals like gold and silver to a far more abstract kind of note, inspiring Don to begin experimenting with coating the surfaces of one dollar notes with layers of 22 karat gold and silver leaf. These inaugural Art Notes reminded us of ‘scratchers' (scratch-off lottery tickets); paradoxically, the precious metal which once insured their value now made them valueless, unable to be tendered until the gold layer was scratched off. Earlier this year, the colorful historical relationship not just between art and money, but between artists and currency as medium and subject matter, was further revealed when we were invited to tour the wonderful collection of David and Louise Riemer. The variety of currency-inspired works we encountered at the Riemers' inspired us to continue using the design of the ubiquitous greenback as a vehicle for creative commentary.

Working with the one dollar bill has provided a fascinating series of challenges. Elements from the original bills were sanded, scratched with a single-edged razor blade, and even chemically removed. To introduce new words into the bill's design, fonts had to be painstakingly recreated over the course of nearly a year; to introduce new graphic elements, we needed to paint a ground that would be opaque enough to cover the rich, deep black lines of the original engraving while also accepting a layer of meticulously registered water-based inkjet printing. Eventually we arrived at a concoction containing titanium dioxide, gum, and digital medium, which serves to bind and bring out the colors in the overprinted ink. For those bills bearing a layer of gold and silver leaf, we printed acrylic ink in the target areas and then applied the leaf by hand directly to the wet acrylic. Using sequential bills made registration slightly easier, and retaining the Federal Reserve's serial numbers helped us to keep track of each bill as the project grew to include dozens of proofs and variations.

We're not interested in counterfeiting money; by using an actual dollar bill as the physical foundation for each work, we hope that our intentions – to alter, satirize, and comment upon the bill's design, rather than to slavishly reproduce it – will be clear from the outset. Initially we simply sought to capitalize (so to speak) on the humorously strong similarities between the dollar's portrait of George Washington and the Mona Lisa, using various methods to merge the two faces until we arrived at a bill with da Vinci's portrait entirely replacing that of the first president. Later, we began to compose bills with the intent to honor artists to whose brilliance, courage, and innovation we are indebted – well known iconoclasts like Frida Kahlo, Vincent Van Gogh, and Marcel Duchamp, as well as unsung international treasures such as Zinaida Serebriakova, one of the first female Russian painters of distinction, and Gustave Caillebotte, a French painter who was also a patron and generous supporter of other Impressionist artists – an art lover who truly put his money where his mouth was. Another sequence, bearing the slogan Corporations Only addresses the troubling assignment of ‘personhood' to corporations and the sense that great sums of money are now restricted to corporations only, as tax loopholes and offshore accounts are increasingly making wealth the sole province of corporate entities. Still other bills, like HONEYBEE's images of endangered honeybees or the bills depicting American Indian leaders like Red Cloud and Sitting Bull, serve to chronicle and celebrate lost or vanishing treasures. Most bills with a human figure also feature a quote from that person; Kahlo's bill reads: Nothing is absolute – everything changes. The Art Notes remain legal tender, but through careful embellishment, we've altered their value; in doing so, we hope to provoke reflection upon what is truly of lasting value in both art and life.

  donald-era-farnsworth-art-notes-mona-800x800
Art Notes: Mona, 2017

  donald-era-farnsworth-art-notes-michelangelo-800x800
Art Notes: The Almighty Dollar, 2017

  donald-era-farnsworth-art-notes-magritte-800x800
Art Notes: Magritte, 2017

  donald-era-farnsworth-art-notes-high-water-800x800
Art Notes: High Water, 2017

The High Water piece is reminiscent of the J.S.G. Boggs monoprint Ripples in the Pond in my own collection. -Editor

  JSG Boggs Ripples in the Pond

For more information, or to order, see:
Art Notes: The Almighty Dollar, 2017 (https://www.artspace.com/donald-era-farnsworth/art-notes-michelangelo#)
https://www.artspace.com/artists/donald-era-farnsworth



Wayne Homren, Editor

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