12/12/2023 One Year On From the NFT Crash, the Digital Art Scene at Miami Art Week Matures

A large maze on the beach during sunset in front of several hotels on Miami Beach.

Sebastian Errazuriz's site-specifc installationMAZE: Journey Through the Algorithmic Selfon the beach in Miami during Art Week.Courtesy of Faena Artnone

During the 2021 crypto boom, Miami became the white-hot center of the scene: Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, christened the Miami Heatā€™s stadium as FTX Arena, the city played host to a raucous Bitcoin 2021, the worldā€™s largest crypto conference, Wynwood became home to startups like Blockchain.com, Solana, and Ripple, and Mayor Francis Suarez announced that he was converting his salary to Bitcoin. And, of course, Miami Art Week that year and last year were marked by an endless series of NFT activations.

Post-boom, much has changed: SBF was convicted of fraud last month, a year after FTX collapsed, the FTX Arena has since been renamed the Kaseya Center, and Bitcoin 2023 had noticeably worse vibes (and attendance). And yet, though the exuberant abundance of funds may no longer be in play, Miamiā€™s burgeoning digital art scene appears intact and noticeably matured.

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At the forefront of those efforts is the PĆ©rez Art Museum Miami, which became more invested in new media arts as Miamiā€™s interest in digital art increased. In 2018, a donation by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation went towards developing a new digital department, which received more funds during the 2021 boom and officially launched at the end of last year. This December, the museum launched PAMMTV, a streaming service for the museumā€™s new media and time-based works. (Meanwhile, the Knight Foundation opened Art Week on Monday by hosting Catalyst, an invite-only arts and tech forum.)

ā€œMiami has always had people who are experimenting with digital art in really interesting ways, but the literacy wasnā€™t there from the institutional side for a long time,ā€ Lauren MonzĆ³n, PAMM TVā€™s program manager, toldARTnews.

ā€œThe NFT boom was curious, because you did get a lot of excitement and anticipation around digital art from the art world and institutions. But that really quick rise and fall also led to skepticism in terms of digital art collecting. Thatā€™s something that I think weā€™re still grappling with a little bit.ā€

A building in front of water and several skyscrapers.
PĆ©rez Art Museum MiamiCourtesy of PĆ©rez Art Museum Miaminone

PAMM TV, and other similar digital media initiatives at the museum, are intended to bridge the gap by creating sustainable, considered infrastructure for new media art that isnā€™t purely dependent on financialization, while events around the fair are showing a deep interest in creating critical spaces for talking about digital art.

This yearā€™s Miami Art Week was abundant with conferences on digital art: Tezos, the favored blockchain platform for many in the art world due to its more environmentally friendly architecture, hosted a dayā€™s worth of talks and performances at the Nautilus Hotel. One of the featured talks was a conversation between Swiss mega-curator Hans Ulrich Obrist and the digital art duo Operator. Bitcoin Ordinals (an NFT platform for the Bitcoin blockchain) hosted a day of talks at the Sagamore Hotel, while Refraction, a Web3 organization, partnered with Miami Community Radio, a new radio and decentralized autonomous organization, to host a series of panels. The list goes on and on. The fairs also participated in the shift towards digital art, from Untitled Art Fairā€™s ā€˜Curating in the Digital Ageā€™ curatorial theme to SCOPEā€™s hosting of a panel on women in Web3.

Artists and institutions who were involved in NFTs during that 2021 peak are also starting to pivot. The point now, they say, isnā€™t to flood the market with NFT collections but to offer works that are more considered and often have a physical component to them.

At the ritzy Faena Hotel Miami Beach, the hotelā€™s nonprofit Faena Art put works by digital artists Beeple and Sebastian Errazuriz in its lobby, with an additional massive installation by Errazuriz on the beach. Faenaā€™s selection of these artists is a sign that, while NFTs may be fading, institutions are still interested in supporting artists who speak to Miamiā€™s tech-centered economy and population.

Though Errazuriz and Beeple released NFT collections in 2021, the artists have since moved onto hybrid works that comment on and incorporate digital elements. In the lobby, Beeple was presenting the sculptureS.122(2023)ā€” that and its sister workHUMAN ONEare the digital artistā€™s first physical works. Meanwhile, Errazuriz has a large sculpture,Battle of the Corporate Nations(2016), that depicts Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk in the midst of battle, cast in white stone. Errazurizā€™s public installation on the beach,MAZE: Journey Through the Algorithmic Self, is made up of eleven miles-worth of plywood, covered in a stucco-like finish, whose center is supposed to act as a kind of public square where people can mingle.

A six foot silver rectangular box with multicolored wires inside sits in a atrium of gold columns.
Digital artist Beepleā€™s sculptureS.122on view at TheCathedral at Faena Hotel Miami Beach during Miami Art Week 2023.Oriol Tarridas/Courtesy of Faena Artnone

ā€œThe problem with NFTs is that it makes no sense to be acquiring them today, artworks that are limited to the reality we currently have,ā€ Errazuriz told me, as he guided us through his maze. ā€œIt would be the equivalent of buying video games in the ā€˜70s.ā€ Guards gazed down at us from platforms topped with red-and-white umbrellas. ā€œSure, you might get lucky and you might buy Space Invaders or Pac Man,ā€ he continued. But everything else, itā€™s gonna kind of be useless and uninteresting a decade or two later.ā€

Errazurizā€™s point: Until digital art technology develops to create better, more immersive experiences, heā€™d rather focus on works that foster human connections. Besides, the rapid development of AI over the last two years has led Errazuriz to think humans donā€™t stand a chance of surviving the disruption that is to come anyways.

Though some were banking on the NFT boom to radically change the state of new media art, the momentum from that market doesnā€™t appear to have been wasted.Kelani Nicole, owner of new media art gallery TRANSFER, moved to Miami in 2021 when she was invited to be a fellow at the Oolite Arts Center.

ā€œI was really optimistic that the NFT boom would finally give digital artists some leverage and I moved here because of that,ā€ Nicole toldARTnews. ā€œThe seismic shift of crypto and encryption hit Miami really hard as the first place in the US to really embrace that,ā€

As those markets have washed away, Nicole hasnā€™t seen sustained interest or support from most of those one-time collectors. Yet, regardless of the shifting attention of Miamiā€™s tech elite, the move has enabled Nicole to run a salon series for digital artists in the years since.

ā€œMy observation is that in Miami, there are a lot of tech companies, there are some research universities, thereā€™s other organizations that are focused on equipment and those kinds of resources. And so I wanted to bring critical theory and conversation into Miami,ā€ said Nicole.

Since then, sheā€™s seen a nascent community of digital artists come together and develop rapidly.

ā€œMiami is a very apolitical place. Itā€™s a very wealth-based culture, fashion-based culture, a seasonal culture. But the artists who live and work here, and who are on the ground have a different experience of Miami. Theyā€™re showing us a city in crisis,ā€ said Nicole. ā€œAnd this is why spaces that support and shine a light on these kinds of critical practices are so important.ā€

If the NFT boom-and-bust left a bad taste in many peopleā€™s mouths, the resulting afterglow seems to be providing enough space, interest, and funds to continue Miamiā€™s digital art scene in a more considered way.

Arts

https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/miami-art-basel-digital-art-crypto-boom-1234688986/

Interesting NFTs
Right Place & Right Time (bitcoin hourly price offset)
Each day, a new composition for the Master is generated autonomously using a data feed of Bitcoin's last 24 hours of price action. Each hour's price programmatically controls rotation, scale, and position of a correlating layer. Astute viewers will surmise the day's price volatility simply by examining the artwork. While the daily image generation is the result of autonomous API calls, utilizing an algorithm the artist wrote, the artist has chosen to retain a control token. This token allows him to fine-tune variables associated with his algorithm, in addition to addressing aesthetic concerns within the life-cycle of the artwork. Layer state, alpha, hue, saturation, and brightness are elements the artist has retained control of in order that this artwork remain a living work-in-progress. An earlier iteration of this artwork was featured as a nightly projection mapping video on the face of the Daniels Fisher Clocktower, as part of ETH Denver 2020. Access to this and additional exclusive content awaits the master token owner at the artist's NFT Portal: https://collect.mattkane.com/minted-works/right-place-right-time-bitcoin-hourly-price-offset/
The Pixel
The Pixel is a single pixel statement. It is created to validate. The Pixel is a digitally native artwork visually represented by a single pixel (1x1). It is a token that signs the most basic unit of a digital image in a traditional global auction house. It is a tiny mark to carry digitally native art to a potential future history.
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