Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet As It's Kept

2022

Many different kinds of coins and small, flat, round-shaped objects.

Rose Salane: All of these coins that had been sorted through the system that are not money at all, but they were used at one point to pay for bus fare.

Narrator: Artist Rose Salane purchased a collection of fake money used by riders on the MTA at an auction, and thus began the idea behind this installation. Salane has an art degree, but she also earned a master’s in urban planning. Her work combines her interest in making art with her curiosity about the city and how it functions.

Rose Salane: It was almost this sampling of a two-year period of people dropping whatever resembled money into this machine or into a transportation system that they would get somewhere, physically get somewhere.

The attempts at kind of cheating the system, but also like needing it as well to just live one’s life through the city. So I do find that objects are really revealing of these moments that, I don’t know, kind of fighting and also getting away with something.

I use the city as a very powerful lens. And I try to see: what are the changes that have significantly reshaped people’s way of moving through an environment, this one. And sometimes I think New York can reveal very unfortunate truths. So I’m interested, as a New Yorker, in knowing the vibe or rhythm of the city.

I was just really invested in letting the objects speak and having objects hold the truths that it does and in that form it retains a psychology of the object itself.

I’m also really interested in the bureaucracy in how this currency that passed through, but it couldn’t pass through to the main level of the agency cashing it in for something that they can report on, like their taxes or like their earnings, so it gets stopped at a specific level. But the individual is able to pass through up until that level until the institution prevents it.


Rose Salane, 64,000 Attempts at Circulation, 2022. Slugs (counterfeit currency used to trick coin-operated devices) acquired from a New York City MTA asset recovery auction installed on patinaed steel tables with screen prints on archival paper. Collection of the artist; courtesy the artist and Carlos/Ishikawa, London. Photograph by Sandenwolff

0:00

0:00


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.