19/08/2022 I Tried to Understand NFT Art. It Wasn't What I Expected

NFT art has plenty of issues. But with the right tech, it could become totally normal in a few years.

When I began my quest to understand NFTs, I did not think I would end up buying one. Yet there I was, scanning a QR code with my phone in the middle of an art exhibit, spending $69 of my own real money to become the proud owner of a jpeg.

The image, namedIndependence, is of a sculpture of the Statue of Liberty surrounded by a pair of metallic snakes, designed by an artist who goes by the name Fvckrender. (He may be a big deal in theNFT art world, but I still had to bleep out his name in my video.)

For three days this summer, I ran around a New York City NFT convention, toured physicalNFT art galleriesand spoke to the artists and entrepreneurs building this new realm of digital property -- and of course, tried to understand what people evendowith their NFTs. I learned thatNFTs are much more than overpriced cartoons of bored apesyou buy using cryptocurrency -- although there are plenty of people trying to get rich off various pixelated animal heads.

Bridget Carey scanning a QR code to buy an NFT called Independence.

Look, ma, no crypto. In learning about NFT art, I find myself buying a piece by scanning a QR code and entering my credit card number -- as easy as buying shoes online. But what do you do with digital art?

Candice Greene/CNET

This new way of buying and selling digital property is -- no question about it -- absolutely wacky. A lot of it is also problematic. Yet to my surprise, while immersing myself, I found a side of it all that is almost hopeful and inspiring in its potential for the art world, and I learned what it will take for NFTs to be part of our everyday lives.

Arts

https://www.cnet.com/culture/internet/i-tried-to-understand-nft-art-it-wasnt-what-i-expected/

Interesting NFTs
A Single Number That Has 10,000,086 Digits
Non-fungible token ERC-721 on Ethereum L2 chain Polygon Token ID: 98227972 PNG image file Image resolution: 15,493 by 15,493 pixel File size: 11,769,312 bytes Minted on May 14, 2021, ed. 1/1 This smart contract exists on the L2 Polygon Network using the startbahn platform. Transferring to accounts not registered on the startbahn platform may require direct contract interaction. Smart Contract Address: 0xC58e0ac03a73ee7793ad1D0fc902925F9695a837 (Matic/Polygon)
Tile [20, 5] - Bring It to Me
20 5
Block Chain Dungeon
Once upon a time... a little boy named Leo loved to paint, draw and experiment. He also loved to play with blocks and chains, which drew him again and again into the rooms of his friends Michel and Angelo. Often they also met in virtual rooms of Cryptovoxels, Decentraland, Somnium Space or Sandbox to create new inventions, read books about new technologies, or just swing the brushes. But on this day something gigantic happened. A good friend of Leo came to visit and brought his girlfriend Mona, who wanted a piece of Leo's art on her skin. This was the birth of the NFT's, as Leo developed Non Fungible Tattoos in the Block Chain Dungeon of Michel and Angelo. From that day on people from all over the world came to get NFT's from Leo or one of his students, like "Skeenee the rat", who controls the NFT machine with his laptop. A new age began.
Cypher::Prophet
Cypher::Prophet is an artwork dedicated to the punk origins of blockchain designed and realized by hackatao and hex6c. In the transposition into images we started from the iconographic canons of the hacker (hoodie, laptop, cryptographic elements) and associated them with the figure of the prophet, thus highlighting the predictive nature of the works of Eric Hughes (Cypherpunk Manifesto, 1988) and Timothy C. May (Crypto Anarchist Manifesto, 1993) as well as of the blockchain inventors Stuart Haber and Scott Stornetta (How to Time-Stamp a Digital Document, The Journal of Cryptography, 1991). Read the full story on https://medium.com/@hex6c/cypher-prophet-the-punk-origins-of-blockchain-1e8fce311e72
Shinobu-zuri, pages from an erotic illustrated book (pages 7 and 8)
Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) Shinobu-zuri, pages from an erotic illustrated book (pages 7 and 8) 1830 - Japan