Adornment, James Stephen George Boggs

Artwork Overview

Adornment, 1990
Where object was made: United States
Material/technique: xerox; engraving
Dimensions:
Object Height/Width (Height x Width): 6.8 x 15.7 cm
Object Height/Width (Height x Width): 2 11/16 x 6 3/16 in
Frame Dimensions (Height x Width x Depth): 11 1/2 x 15 x 1 in
Weight (Weight): 3 lbs
Credit line: Gift of Ms. Carolyn Connerat
Accession number: 1996.0187.b
Not on display

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Images

Label texts

Archive Label 2003: As critic Lawrence Weschler noted, “J.S.G. Boggs still makes money the old-fashioned way-he draws it.” Boggs’s performance pieces challenge the role of official currency by substituting his own laboriously hand-drawn and photocopied bills for authentic ones. Boggs’s works also underscore the role of art as commodity when he barters for goods with his hand-drawn bills. Boggs has been arrested for counterfeiting in England and in Australia, as well as investigated in the United States by the Secret Service - which could be taken as evidence of the effectiveness of his artistic strategy. Adornment is a full documentation of one such transaction. Boggs purchased a $400 necklace with a photocopy of one of his hand-drawn $500 bills. He received $100 change in authentic currency.

Exhibitions

Citations

Tice, Lisa, ed.. Money, Art, and the Art of Money, September 2-October 23, 2011. Annville, Pennsylvania: Suzanne H. Arnold Art Gallery, Lebanon Valley College, 2011.