Cultural Currency Exhibition at the Loveland Museum

Cultural Currency: Contemporary Art from the Riemer Collection at the Loveland Museum

Beginning on Saturday, Jan. 27, “Cultural Currency: Contemporary Art from the Riemer Collection” exhibition will be on view in the main gallery of the Loveland Museum.

This exhibit presents the innovative ways artists use money as a medium to explore preconceived notions of value and worth beyond declared denominations. The artists in the exhibition investigate monetary value by meticulously repurposing bills and coins into exquisite, conceptually engaging artworks.

The collection is the passion of Davis Riemer and Louise Rothman-Riemer, investment advisers from Oakland, Calif., who began collecting money-themed art in 1995 to encourage new attitudes toward money’s intrinsic value. The constant exchange of money for goods and services is core to our daily lives and has been for centuries. We rely on monetary transactions, a quintessential human act, to meet our needs and desires, from luxury purchases like high-end cars and clothing to essential items like food and shelter. Given this worldwide phenomenon, consumers rarely consider the aesthetic qualities of currency, which range in various colors and sizes and designed by artists.

As artist Ray Beldner aptly points out, U.S. currency is “the world’s biggest ongoing print edition. Every bill is unique, and it’s numbered uniquely. It’s signed by the person that caused it to be made, the Secretary of the Treasury. It’s made from archival materials. It’s 100 percent cotton. It’s beautifully done.” Like Beldner, who realized money had been overlooked for its material qualities, the artists of Cultural Currency repurposed the art form of money and deconstructed it to address an array of issues, including race, capitalism, politics, national and cultural identities and much more. However, the psychological toll brought on by monetary
rule is a commonality shared by all artists in the show—from humor to fantasy to desperation—the emotional impact is palpable as money seems to be an abstract, illusive object for many.

The exhibition will take place at the Loveland Museum from Jan. 27 through April 28, 2024, and will offer free admission during Night on the Town (second Fridays) from 5-8 p.m. February through April as well as Wednesday, March 6, from 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Exhibition Details: “Cultural Currency: Contemporary Art from the Reimer Collection”