Drawing from old currencies, banking archives and contemporary art, Creative Accounting scratches below the surface of our 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. At a time when money is becoming increasingly abstract Creative Accounting speculates on its wider value.
Archival objects and material history loans from local historical collections and lenders such as the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences and Westpac Group Archives will complement recent and newly commissioned work by a selection of Australian and international artists such as Fiona Hall, Andrew Hurle, Kenzee Patterson, Melanie Gilligan, Daniel McKewen, Ryan Presley and Penelope Cain.
Creative Accounting promises to be an accessible and thought-provoking exhibition which elicits curiosity and re-appraisal of an intrinsic component of contemporary living, through the combination of art and artefact. Creative Accounting scratches below the surface of the economic system to reveal money's enigmatic side.