Free Market Money in a Pop Iconomy
Free Market Money in a Pop Iconomy
When Roy Lichtenstein first created his lithograph of the ten dollar bill, he was building a bridge between the highly idiosyncratic artistic vocabulary of Abstract Expressionism of the 1940s and 1950s and the emergent interest in an art of the mundane things of mass production and sensibility such as money and comic books in the 1960s. Another way of looking at it is this: The Pop Artists reversed the modernist tenet of making the invisible visible (Paul Klee)—which assumed the primacy of the inner experience. Instead they attached a certain aesthetic aura to common commercial and public imagery. In the optimism of the post-World War II US economy, nothing was more prevalent in everyone's daily experience than the dollar bills that circulated each with its cachet of consumer potential. When an artist focuses his attention on and uses as subject matter such a common and desirable object, it takes on a new meaning simply by asking viewers to take pause at our own experience of physical money. This subtle inflection-reflection in daily experience helps us to see it with new eyes, and to value its aesthetic as well as its purchasing power. No one would accuse Roy Lichtenstein of counterfeiting money. That was certainly not the point. Instead what we experience is his raising of the mundane to the status of icon.
Warhol adopted the commercial photo-silkscreen process in 1962 which enabled him to generate and replicate images with great rapidity. Virtually anything could be photographed and reproduced including existing images.
[Andy Warhol, Dollar Bills, Screen print painting, 1962]
Among his works of 1962 are several that use the dollar bill as source image. It may be an ironic twist of history that Andy Warhol's paintings and drawings of dollar bills were created the same year that Milton Friedman first published Capitalism and Freedom, the seminal book that framed the rationale for our current free market economy. In essence, Freidman's theory was that an economy operating free of governmental control would of itself raise everyone's standard of living. The conflation of freedom in the democratic sense with economic forces set up the culture for unfettered profiteering—what I would call the shadow rather than supply side of capitalism. One unfortunate consequence of this economic philosophy is that the world of business and commerce has managed to control not only the market place, but also the rules and regulations governing those activities such that the concept of a "level playing field" for economic opportunity is nothing more than a myth. Once upon a time, money was created as a system of values for accounting of transactions; it was a means toward an end of continuous circulation of money in order for everyone's needs to be met. However in our free market economy, the endgame is money and accumulated wealth, a systematic reward for competitive behavior. The rights that are at the heart of political freedom, that protect equal economic opportunity and our common natural resources have simply become more commodities available to the free market.
Thus the "almighty dollar" has taken on an iconic quality in which the representation and the ownership of it has overshadowed the underlying structure and value of what is represented by that dollar--and of course its real value is subject to change at a moment's notice. In order to feed free market activity, the government reserves the right to order the issuance of more money as it controls the supply and the interest cost of using it.
1 Comments:
John I love your explorations of human psyche and shadow through the invention of money and free market system. However, greed, fear, competition, lack, inequality, war and poverty are institutionalized through the usurious and centralized commercial banking system. Market is not free, since money is not accessible to vast majority of people in the planet not involved in the formal employment sector largely in urban maket economy, served by commercial banks.
Federal reserve is owned not by Government, but by itselfand its private shareholders. Also no law exists that require us to pay tax.
There has been a lot hidden from public by the money power that controls everything from media, academia to health care to war economy.
It is time for us to take a stand empowered by knowledge and separate reality from illusions of free market and equal opportunity and democracy. Because reality is clearly showing us something that we are refusing to see. Question is are we willing to step out for truth and justice, even if it means dropping all dogmas and theories and isms that we hold unexamined and unquestioned????
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