Labor is delighted to present Labor Days, the second chapter of a two-part exhibition by New York-based artist Jill Magid. For Labor Days (October 1 - November 30) Magid presents a new body of work that expands on part I, Tender (May 27-September 15). Each exhibition explores the intertwining of the economy and the lives of individual people on both a small and large scale. Part I focused on flows of circulation; part II focuses on labor.
During the pandemic, the complex relationships between individuals, groups, institutions, and deeply rooted systems quickly came into stark relief. Magid was especially struck by the way public figures weighed the loss of human lives against the supposed costs for the economy. Against this backdrop, she developed Tender, a growing body of work first realized as a public artwork of the same name. In Tender (2020), Magid interceded in the U.S. economy with a dispersed monument that consisted of 120,000 newly-minted 2020 pennies, laser-engraved on their edges with the phrase “THE BODY WAS ALREADY SO FRAGILE” and entered into circulation. The number of Tender pennies was equal to the $1200 stimulus checks that were issued to individuals by the U.S. Treasury.
Some of these engraved pennies exchange hands in Magid’s film, Tender Balance (2021), which grounds the works in Part I and II of the exhibition. The film begins behind the scenes at the U.S. Mint, as pennies are packed and then transported, via armored cash-in-transit trucks, to bodegas throughout New York City. In footage filmed during the pandemic in New York, the film also finds haunting echoes with the refrigerated morgue trucks that appeared outside hospitals. The ambient, often ominous score permeates the space of the exhibition.