Money and Art: Exchange and Transaction As Themes in Art-works
2024-25 Sem B
1 - Arts and Humanities
School of Creative Media
SCM
3
B1, A1
0%
No
English
English
PILO 1
PILO 2
PILO 3
PILO 9
PILO 10
ATTITUDE
ABILITY
ACCOMPLISHMENT
DISCLAIMER: This is not a course about the management of money, and it is not a course about the art market. It is a course concerned with the origins of money, the nature of exchange, and how money and themes of exchange are manipulated by artists for aesthetic and ideological purposes.

In “Money” students will be exposed to an anthropological and aesthetic history of money (contrasting the economic version with alternative histories from anthropology and the art-world). Students will explore theories of money as cultural inscription and as an extension of social and cultural exchange-networks based on trust. Changing technological modes of money will be contextualized within a history that examines how culture changes as exchange changes. This discursive exploration will be framed by an examination of specific artists (from the ancients to the contemporary) who investigate money (cost, value, exchange) or use it as the material in their work.

An emphasis will be placed on the role of new media in contemporary exchange. “The genealogy of the money form is the study of a new logic that is the money of the mind” (Shell, 1993, pg.11). In the digital age, physical money as a material structure is on the threshold of obsolescence. Trading is now enacted digitally through databases, flash trading algorithms, micro-transactions, and online auctions. Modes of networked digital money are proliferating: RFID cards, NFC, alternative open source currencies (BitCoins, etc…) and mobile transactions (Google Wallet, PayPal, Square, Card.io etc.). Art is also becoming conceptual, virtual and data-driven. This transition from material money to virtual trade, from material art to virtual visualization, constitutes a shift in culture, and an opportunity to explore the interdependence of economic exchange and cultural inscription.
No course material highlight is available
CRN Section Term Type Capacity Day Time Building Room Instructor
14484 14484C01 2024-25 Sem B Lecture 60 Thu 09:00:00 - 11:50:00 YEUNG Y4302
  • Miss KWONG Kai Ling