Cold, Hard Euro Cash

Published: 3 March 1999 y., Wednesday
Making money may be considered an art. But making the euro -- the new unit of Continental currency -- has been artless. That is the premise of Coin ­ Note ­ Sign, a rebel Web project that calls on international artists to design their own versions of the euro. Officially adopted by 11 European countries in January, the euro is used only for electronic transactions. The actual currency will not be distributed until 1 January 2002. Which is to say that the euro remains a virtual currency, according to C. Byrne, an Edinburgh, Scotland, artist who organized the project. Part art, partly a prank to satirize the ephemeral quality of the new money, the project is soliciting electronic submissions of alternative euro designs. Come mid-March, 11 winners will be selected and laser printed for display at the upcoming Internet Art Festival x-99 in Lorient, France. The official euro designs were the result of a competition and public-opinion poll held in February 1996 by the European Monetary Institute (EMI). R. Kalina, a designer with the Austrian Center Bank, won the contest with a series of images that symbolize Europe_s architectural heritage without representing specific monuments. The images are meant to express openness, communication, and cooperation, the EMI said. "The rhetoric is fairly clear.... A side effect of this neutrality is also to mask the terrible histories of national conflict in Europe, which the EU and especially the euro are supposed to help prevent happening again" Byrne said. At least one of the alt-euros that has been submitted for project evokes this theme. French artist G. Cliquet submitted a 10 euro note that depicts prisoners in a World War II concentration camp. Other artists have taken a cheekier approach. A 50 euro bill designed by Australian Nick Ritar sports a McDonald_s logo on one side and Coca-Cola_s on the other…
Šaltinis: Wired News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Halfway Around the World

Swiss-English Balloonists Cruise Over the Pacific. more »

"Connecting Canadians"

Canada strives to be most wired country. more »

Internet and TV marketing

The future of Internet retailing lies in the marriage of television marketing and computer technology. more »

The awards of British librarians

Internet database to match books with readers_ moods. more »

Genealogy bounty coming to Web

Mormons set to put part of vast collection online. more »

Hardly alone in cyberspace

Entertainers use Web to reach audiences in new ways. more »

Cold, Hard Euro Cash

A rebel Web project. more »

First online bridge championships slated

An effective tool of bringing together players. more »

Forget e-mail, get into twee mail

The PostPet fad currently sweeping Japan. more »

Wedding Bells Ring At New Site

How to plan weddings. more »