a room at the center of the world
surrounded by the noise of men
Interface, Oakland CA USA
October 26 - December 2 2018
I press the coins with a machine that cuts through cities and continents like a rusty knife. An unbelievably long and narrow machine-press, it forks and grinds its way across land, unwavering from its stubborn route, locked in steel. The machine is sometimes fenced in with chain-link and barbed wire, sometimes bordered by the blank backsides of warehouses, and sometimes left wide open like an ugly and unhealing scar, dirty, and smelling of train oil and dry grass.
I lay out heavy pocketfuls of coins in a long row along the rail and wait. Sometimes I’ll wait hours, sitting on the slag with a beer and the insects feasting on dandelion and milkweed. The weight will come on slowly with deep underground tones that send me back to the tall grass. The engine comes, huge, with a blast of wind and the incredible cacophony of closed cars rattling like they might shake apart and wheels hammering down on rail joints, screaming metal-on-metal. There is an extra noise when wheels that could cut a truck in two roll over the shallow thickness of dimes and quarters and cents. Endless cars hammer through the strip, and then it passes, taking its noise with it. The crickets come back on and I search the rocks for the scattered and flattened coins, still warm and dirty with train oil.
The ambiguous legality of the trespass, the mis-use of the privately owned machine, and the destruction of legal tender enacted along these weed strips together stretch out an illicit liminality. Destruction makes a space. And although it is narrow, unbelievably thin, is it there. A gap in the fence.
(text adapted from coins and tokens, 2018, Jenine Marsh.)
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For her exhibition at Interface, Jenine Marsh presents a new sculptural installation continuing her recent explorations with train-pressed coins. Harnessing the force of these readymade machines, coins of mixed currencies are pressed. Form and value simultaneously deformed, the flattened coins become sculptural materials for Marsh’s work. Marsh considers the flattening and destruction of coins as not only an anti-capitalist gesture, but also as a potentially feminist, transformative one, producing alternative modes of value and exchange that are tactile, embodied and personal.
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A new poem by Claudia La Rocco was presented in conjunction with this exhibition and Marsh’s title is drawn from that poem.
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fist in pocket, 2018. Rust-stained shoulder-pads, necklace cord, bungee cord, staples, wire, powdered pigment, gypsum cement, steel hardware.
contortion (steel), 2018. Found metal ring, rust-stained blouse, train-flattened and drilled coins of mixed currencies, wire, gypsum cement, powdered pigment.
the trespass, 2018. Found metal rings, concrete, soil, California wildflower seeds, train-flattened coins of mixed currencies, found American penny, wire, lead acid-core solder, powdered pigment.
contortion (silver), 2018. Found metal ring, rust-stained blouse, train-flattened and drilled coins of mixed currencies, wire, gypsum cement, powdered pigment.
sun-catcher in shade/model of derailment, 2018. Crystal, wire, lead acid-core solder.
Untitled (sentiment of value), 2018. Open series. Train flattened and drilled coins of mixed currencies, wire, lead acid-core solder.
coins and tokens, 2015-18. Open series of train-pressed coins and tokens of mixed currencies.
Review: KQED
Tzvetnik
Journal