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Pancho Villa, Mexican Revolutionary, as rendered in
$254.95 worth of Canadian Tire Money |
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This piece was created for Borders and Boxes, an
exchange exhibition between Mexico City and Ottawa on the theme of
globalization. As a way of expressing the dynamic between inexpensive
consumer products here in Canada and the low wages paid to Mexican workers,
Pancho Villa (someone who had fought and lost a revolution to free workers
from servitude on haciendas) is rendered in 1,160 coupons from the Canadian
Tire chain of stores. |

|
Pancho Villa, Mexican Revolutionary, as Rendered in
$254.95 worth of Canadian Tire Money |

Michael Bell, circa 1972, as Rendered in 2430 Post-It
Notes
Carleton University Art Gallery
December, 2003
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Noting my portrait of Pancho Villa in Canadian Tire
Money, I was asked by the staff at the Carleton University Art Gallery to
create a piece in a similar vein for Michael Bell's retirement party. That
Michael had spent a career in arts administration, portraying him in Post-It
Notes seemed a fair medium. |
