21/09/2021 Generative artist nets $5.38 million in latest Art Blocks hit

 

Quick Take

  • Monica Rizzolli’s ‘Fragments of an Infinite Field’ collection sold out in less than an hour.
  • Individual pieces in the set are now selling on OpenSea for as much as 69 ether.

A generative artist whose work depicts flowers within a “potentially infinite field of foliage” has made 1,623 ether (around $5.38 million) through a sale on Art Blocks, the non-fungible token (NFT) platform.

Monica Rizzolli’s ‘Fragments of an Infinite Field’ collection, comprised of 1,024 pieces, was sold through a Dutch auction on Art Blocks Curated on September 13 – with prices starting at 10 ether. The entire set sold out in under an hour.

Transaction data on Etherscan shows Rizzolli netting 1,623 in ether across three transactions in the hours after the sale. 

Since the initial mint, individual pieces from the collection have changed hands on the NFT marketplace OpenSea for as much as 69 ether (around $229,000). The so-called ‘floor price’ – determined by the lowest priced pieces in the set – currently stands at roughly 13.4 ether (around $44,500).

Certain well-followed NFT collectors such as the pseudonymous Cozomo de’ Medici and JDH stumped up hundreds of thousands of dollars to snap up individual pieces in the set.

One Twitter user pointed out, citing Dune Analytics data, that Art Blocks notched its best single day for secondary market sales in September yesterday, the bulk of which was down to trading in Rizzolli’s work.

In season

Generative artists write code that creates art in a certain style and within certain parameters, but at random such that the artists themselves cannot predict exactly what their work will look like.

The genre has boomed in popularity over the summer – primarily due to surging investment in the NFT space. Art Blocks has capitalized on these market conditions so effectively that it recently had to introduce Dutch auctions – in which bidding starts high and gradually falls until everything is sold – to slow the pace at which new work is hoovered up off the platform.

In a blurb describing the project, Rizzolli said “the main environmental parameter of the composition is the determination of a season of the year.”

“The season determines the landscape’s colors and defines specific phenomena for each of them, such as rain in summer, snow in winter, petals falling in autumn, and pollen in spring. The flower has several possible variables, which can be macro aspects, affecting the entire population of the species, or micro, affecting each individual of the species differently,” she added.

 
Arts

https://www.theblockcrypto.com/post/117605/art-blocks-hit-generative-artist-5-38-million

Interesting NFTs
Classical Collage
voronoi fun with some well known art
Poem by Dainagon Tsunenobu, from the series One Hundred Poems by One Hundred Poets, Explained by the Nurse
Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) Poem by Dainagon Tsunenobu, from the series One Hundred Poems by One Hundred Poets, Explained by the Nurse late 1830s - Japan
Genesis
José Delbo sent me his striking pencil sketch and powerful inked work, which I then interpreted in oil on canvas. I wanted to create a very painterly piece with obvious brush marks etc, but I was also aiming for a nostalgic feel, a kind of 1980’s superhero comic book look, the kind I grew up with. My goal with this animation was to try to recreate, in part, the creative process that both artists went through with the visual information I had. I was able to showcase my painting process more accurately as I could take photographs of my progress throughout. Consecutive images could then be layered like brush strokes over José’s drawing to create the impression that this was one continuous artwork from pencil, to ink, to completed painting. The representation of the line sketch at the beginning, then pencil/ink and lastly the paint layers being applied demonstrate both artists’ struggle for the right lines, tone, form, and colour until the work is finally completed. As the oil was still wet with each photograph the glare of my studio lights can be seen in the brush strokes. Eventually, the figure emerges and as it does, our hero comes to life, looking directly at the viewer -- but is he grimacing in approval or disgust? We will never know for sure as just before he can say anything, white paint is brushed across the canvas entirely and the process begins again. Only the bat is quick enough to escape.
No Future #9/15
None
Stella
Oh hi! I'm Stella. I've never told anyone this, but I once cleaned a dog. Sometimes I daydream of a life full of hitting on yo' man, wet food, and swiping left. Let's get busy!