01/08/2021 The Rise and Rise of NFT Artworks

If the pandemic has been good for anything at all, it’s the fuelling of online shopping, interaction and creativity. Case in point: the recent prominence of artists (and their less-obvious collaborators) pushing non-fungible tokens, or NFTs—digital collector cards that accompany an artwork, providing bonus material. An idiosyncratic Easter Egg, if you will.

If you’ve heard of them, chances are you hadn’t just a few months ago. This doesn’t make you uncool or unaware. While it’s true they’ve been knocking around since 2014 (see Decentraland or CryptoPunks), they didn’t hit the mainstream until early 2021, with many high-profile and unexpected collaborators wanting a slice of the crypto pie.

For example, Liam Payne of One Direction teamed up with Grammy-winner Zedd and audio-reactive artist Sillygabe to create the Lonely Bug Collection, launched a month ago. This was a product of lockdown boredom (plus a somewhat stalling solo career and lots of money to play with) and allowed Liam’s fans to bid on NFTs to gain special prizes, such as a place at the table next to the singer himself at an immersive dinner party in Las Vegas.

How successful this has been for Payne has not been announced; he’s gone quiet on the subject since it launched, and his following consists largely of teenage girls (albeit in their millions) who likely don’t have the disposable income to throw around on digital art bidding. Nonetheless, Payne’s popularity and reach will have opened NFTs up to vast group who might normally be uninterested.

Another artiste tossing his hat into the NFT ring is two-time Oscar-winner Anthony Hopkins. The Hollywood star (who famously skipped Skyping into the Academy Awards to accept his gong for The Father this year because he thought he wouldn’t win) appears in Zero Contact, a movie shot mostly on Zoom and the first film released on VUELE, the world’s debut NFT viewing platform.

Meanwhile, in March, Christie’s sold American digital artist Beeple’s work Everydays: The First 5000 Days for $69.3m. The auction house made further NFT history in May when it offered traditional paintings by women alongside tokens by the anonymous digital feminist collective Rewind.

Having honoured women, Rewind has now focused on LGBTQ+ youth, teaming up with fashion house Givenchy, specialised sales platform Veve, and art space Amar Singh Gallery. More history has been made by this collaboration. Not only did they sell the world’s first NFT for a beauty brand, they did it in two seconds, making $128k. Gallery owner Singh told V.F.: “Rewind created the work using original photography, editing the images digitally, utilising animation to create this burst of movement that was in celebration of LGBTQ+ rights.

“If you look throughout the artwork there’s the pride flag, the trans flag, two women, two men—it’s very powerful. It was sold in 1,952 editions and they all sold out. That’s monumental. And it’s the first time we’ve seen one of the largest companies in the world embracing digital artwork. And rather than doing this for profit, they’re doing it for good.”

The artwork is titled “Pride” and draws inspiration from Givenchy’s hallmarks in a series of animated portraits symbolising diversity, the assertion of identity and the fight for equal rights. The message: a universal kind of beauty.

Givenchy Parfums have donated the money raised to Le MAG Jeunes (Movement for the Assertion of Young Gay, Lesbian, Bi & Trans people), a French initiative founded in 1985 in Paris, which raises awareness and delivers support at schools by lobbying international institutions and promoting the implementation of more inclusive public policies.

“It was an honour to partner with Givenchy, Amar Singh Gallery and Veve to raise this money for such an important cause,” says Rewind. “As artists, our mission remains committed to highlighting the underrepresented and marginalised.”

And they’re up for more. “Rewind Collective want to collaborate again alongside me for further LGBTQ+ causes,” Singh says. “We are looking at other digital artworks and artists as a new frontier to help solve global issues around women’s and LGBTQ+ rights.”

So are NFTs the way of the future, now that auction houses, perfumers, Silence of the Lambs fans and Directioners are all clubbing together to get involved?

“There will always be physical art, but digital art opens the gate to millions of collectors,” Singh weighs in. “Gen Z, millions of young people, will continue to buy this type of art, I’m certain.”

Arts

https://www.vanityfair.com/london/2021/07/the-rise-and-rise-of-nft-artworks/amp

Interesting NFTs
#84603
By OthersideDeployer
Pending Gerbil #10/23
The #PendingGerbil drew his breath nervously. Fail Dropped Dropped and Replaced There were nothing in this world he feared more. He looked at the chords that crossed the abyss in front of him. They were loaded with pending gerbils, clinging for their life. No open space to be seen. The world machine creaked under the load. As the wheel turned and settled on a new block with a load bang, the chords vibrated, and short shrieks were heard as tired paws lost their grip and the gerbils fell into oblivion. #PendingGerbil closed his eyes, sent a short prayer to @VitalikButerin, and took the leap. Written by: @Werekitty1 Pending Gerbil is a very special collaboration with NonFunGerbils (https://nonfungerbils.com/pendinggerbil)
Jackson Palmer
Good morning! I'm Jackson Palmer. I'm a Spin Instructor by day, and I like reading Danielle Steele by night. I'm convinced that that one day cats will rule this planet. One day I'll prove it. Can you make my brilliant dreams come true?
Who's in control?
In a society where everyone wants to control everyone, who's in control? "Who's in control?" is a mirror of a controlling society, a futuristic vision of a current reality. Artwork with three different states in all Layers (day, night and sunset) allows owners to make different combinations and show who is in control of this artwork! *** Scanning this artwork with the ARize app [https://arize.io/] will trigger an AR video experience*** ***Music used in the videoart by Midranger (feat. Holly Drummond) - "Unrequited" ***
The Scion
A young figure caught in a moment of distraction, aware only ephemerally of his unconscious being, as it engages in psychological and psychedelic layer spaces. His right arm casually cradles a moray eel; the figure is comfortable but not truly aware of the potentials for danger in such negligence. His shirt reads “Bello” in Pokemon style font, harkening back to a childhood straddling the millennial threshold. To his right side, out of the unconscious deep, shrouded alien heads propagate as a fractal totem, each new iteration a more sophisticated rendering of emotional masking over the cold mystery of the greys. As the scion of the Budgie-Sattva, the young man, in his distraction, is also simultaneously aware of higher levels of self discovery. To his left a psychological topology sets beneath the oracle side of an 8 ball ,hovering; its message a purest concept of acceptance. The “Scion” lettering is in 80’s HeMan style bold declaration. The lower right side of the painting is like a hybrid of melon, feathers, and seeds. The crystals in the background bring light; conducted, refracted, reflected, and dispersed, to balance the dark shadow of the figure’s physical body. The aura of the scion succeeds in layers to point, with a finger, and the crown chakra, toward a center of a mandala existing as nigh pure application of strokes, in essence painterly abstraction, but also revealing hints of the Aura of migraine, and the bi-hemispherical nature of the brain–noting concerns of the possibility of inherited mental disease. Yet the flourish of chakra as it sets against that center is robust, active, coherent, and reveling against all fear. Fundamentally, the piece speaks to the activation of one’s potential to begin to “Know Thyself”, and find greater awareness out of the enigmas of the mind–as an inculcated seed given to the rich soil of one’s own birthright.