Drawing from alternative currencies, banking archives, pop culture and contemporary art, Creative Accounting scratched below the surface of the economic system to reveal money’s enigmatic side. Money is many things at once-an abstract rendering of value, an agent of propaganda, a decorative device. It plays a central role in all of our lives yet is often overlooked as an object of contemplation. Creative Accounting brought to light some of the stories that surround currency-from the history of banking to the intricacies of anti-counterfeit patterns. Casting a critical eye, the exhibition aimed to reinvigorate our engagement with money and the economic system beyond next week’s pay packet or the latest stock market crisis
Participants in today’s financial markets confront a sea of data. Whilst the availability of market ...
This article focuses on the possibility of developing an "art of science" in the literal s...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore how accounting is entwined in the cultural practice of popular m...
'Show Me The Money' asks what does 'the market' look like? What does money really stand for? How can...
Recent decades of financialisation have seen a significant growth in art that mobilises various form...
What does money really stand for? How can the abstractions of high finance be made visible? Show me ...
SThe book discusses how culture simultaneously shapes and is shaped by the economy. Over the past fe...
The book discusses how culture simultaneously shapes and is shaped by the economy. Over the past few...
Artmoney is a community currency based on the production and exchange of original art. Critical of t...
The exhibition toured to four venues: the Northern Gallery of Contemporary Art, Sunderland (2014), C...
This research examines the financialisation of art within the tradition of STS-inflected market stud...
Art Cash considers the relationship between currency and fine art prints, focusing on the way that a...
Show Me The Money, the image of finance 1700 to the present (2014-16) was an AHRC/Arts Council Engla...
This thesis clarifies the concept of creative accounting, defines it and distinguishes it from fraud...
Agency Money is one of the most important pieces of “social technology ” ever developed, but as an o...
Participants in today’s financial markets confront a sea of data. Whilst the availability of market ...
This article focuses on the possibility of developing an "art of science" in the literal s...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore how accounting is entwined in the cultural practice of popular m...
'Show Me The Money' asks what does 'the market' look like? What does money really stand for? How can...
Recent decades of financialisation have seen a significant growth in art that mobilises various form...
What does money really stand for? How can the abstractions of high finance be made visible? Show me ...
SThe book discusses how culture simultaneously shapes and is shaped by the economy. Over the past fe...
The book discusses how culture simultaneously shapes and is shaped by the economy. Over the past few...
Artmoney is a community currency based on the production and exchange of original art. Critical of t...
The exhibition toured to four venues: the Northern Gallery of Contemporary Art, Sunderland (2014), C...
This research examines the financialisation of art within the tradition of STS-inflected market stud...
Art Cash considers the relationship between currency and fine art prints, focusing on the way that a...
Show Me The Money, the image of finance 1700 to the present (2014-16) was an AHRC/Arts Council Engla...
This thesis clarifies the concept of creative accounting, defines it and distinguishes it from fraud...
Agency Money is one of the most important pieces of “social technology ” ever developed, but as an o...
Participants in today’s financial markets confront a sea of data. Whilst the availability of market ...
This article focuses on the possibility of developing an "art of science" in the literal s...
Purpose: This paper aims to explore how accounting is entwined in the cultural practice of popular m...