Defaced money show in Cambridge addresses 250 years of anger

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Want cut-out dollar billImage source, Mark Wagner

Image caption,

The exhibition reveals how currency has been defaced for centuries as a means of social commentary

Punched, scratched and digitally-manipulated money will be put on show as part of a new exhibition.

It reveals how currencies have been "mutilated" by campaigners to address issues of social, political and racial injustice covering 250 years.

These include the Suffragettes, the US and French revolutions and the Black Lives Matter protests.

"Defaced! Money, Conflict, Protest" is at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge from Tuesday.

Some of the exhibits are merely artworks that incorporate currency, such as Boo Whorlow's Dog Save The Queen, featuring Queen Elizabeth II walking dogs and a union jack flag.

Image source, The Fitzwilliam Museum

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The most significant defacement of coins recorded in Europe was in France targeting Napoleon III's image, after Paris was starved into submission by the Prussians in 1871

Curator Dr Richard Kelleher said: "This is the first major exhibition to present a world history of protest through currencies mutilated as cries of anger, injustice or despair.

"The acts of defacement on show reveal the hidden struggles behind some of the major events of the past 250 years, as disparate as the French and American Revolutions, the Suffragette movement, the Siege of Mafeking, the Spanish Civil War, the Nazi concentration camp system and occupation, the deadly sectarian Troubles in Northern Ireland, and the Black Lives Matter protests."

Image source, Boo Whorlow

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Boo Whorlow's money artworks often make reference to the Royal Family, here paying homage to Jamie Reed's Sex Pistols/God Save the Queen image

Image source, The Fitzwilliam Museum

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Defacing coins and putting them back into circulation was not a major campaigning strategy for British Suffragettes, but it did attract national press attention

Image source, The Fitzwilliam Museum

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The Nazis issued money specifically for use in their concentration camps to create an illusion of normality, but they often could not be used as there was nothing to buy

Image source, Sean Kushner

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Sean Kushner's dollar bill makes reference to Donald Trump's meeting with Vladimir Putin (who is referred to a "ba[b]e") and the former US president's proposed wall along the US/Mexico border

Image source, The Fitzwilliam Museum

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Wefail satirises the invasion of Iraq in 2003 by superimposing UK Prime Minister Tony Blair over Saddam Hussain on an Iraqi banknote

Image source, The Fitzwilliam Museum

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During the sectarian Troubles in Northern Ireland, coins were frequently defaced, such as this one being stamped with the initials for the Provisional Irish Republican Army

Image source, PA Media

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Harry of England/Ten Megs is another work by Boo Whorlow

Image source, The Fitzwilliam Museum

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Dr Kelleher said that in a climate of inflation and debt "the exhibition's themes in which currency continues to be created and defaced in protest remain urgently relevant"

The free exhibition runs until 8 January.

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