05/08/2022 Why Musician and Ethereum NFT Artist Jimmy Edgar Is Skeptical of Music NFTs

“There’s always a little bit of humor in my art. There’s always a little bit of sarcasm.”


Image: Jimmy Edgar.
Image: Jimmy Edgar.

For musician and visual artist Jimmy Edgar, NFTs are intangible—but that’s not a bad thing.

In themusic world, Edgar has worked with the likes of Vince Staples, Charli XCX, Miguel, Machinedrum, and remixed Lady Gaga’s “Babylon.” But he’s also branched out on his own with NFTs.

Edgar is releasing anEthereumNFT collection on August 11 called OXYGEN, which consists of 13 artworks that play with the viewer’s conception of the immaterial, liquid, air, and consumerist symbols of adulthood.

“Through a metaphysical process that Jimmy coins ‘digital condensation,’ the imagination solidifies as literal objects,” a press release reads.

The NFTs will be displayed at the Vellum LA NFT gallery in a solo exhibition in Los Angeles from August 11 until September 11 and will also be sold on NFT marketplace Foundation. Alice Scope and Sinziana Velicescu curated the exhibition.

NFTs—unique blockchain tokens that signify ownership—are connected to the digital art they authenticate. Edgar is comfortable with the abstract concepts of the blockchain and digital tokens in part because the OXYGEN NFTs deal so directly with the idea ofimmaterialityand the potential state changes of matter.

“I see Ethereum as like a layer of the medium of the art,” he toldDecryptin an interview, adding that Ethereum NFTs essentially function as “a super futuristic certificate of authenticity” for digital art.

BLOW DRYER, an NFT from Edgar’s OXYGEN collection. Edgar told Decrypt that Dyson products “symbolize this ascension into adulthood.” Image: Jimmy Edgar.

Like the OXYGEN collection, Edgar’s previously released NFT collectionsOBJECTZand OPTIONZ also incorporate 3D-rendered images, surrealist physicalities, punchy color gradients, and sometimes draw inspiration from artist Jeff Koons.

“There’s always a little bit of humor in my art,” Edgar said of his work. “There’s always a little bit of sarcasm.”

Edgar first got into NFTs in early 2021. His friends in the music industry had become excited about the potential of NFTs, and Edgar was quick to get on board with the idea but wanted to apply it to visual art.

“My entire life is pretty much existing in the digital realm,” he said, reflecting on why digital art is so important to him.

And immateriality—the idea that something can exist as a “non-object” without physicality—doesn’t devalue NFTs for Edgar. Instead, he views it as a part of the evolution of thought and visual art, and the intangibility of digital assets is a theme explored in his work.

“We’re kind of like this generation that’s passing into the immaterial—we’re moving up the dimensions and becoming more immaterial,” he said. “I have a lot of patience and conviction for cryptocurrency as a digital medium.”

EPOXY ONE, an NFT from Edgar’s OXYGEN collection. Image: Jimmy Edgar.

When it comes to music, Edgar views songs as like unseeable sculptures.

“I always saw music as sculpting in a way,” he shared. “Music is somewhat immaterial in the way that you don’t see it, you just feel it and hear it.”

While he sees immense potential for visual art NFTs, Edgar doesn’t feel the same way about the current NFT applications for music—so don’t expect any songs from him to drop on the NFT music platformRoyalor elsewhere anytime soon.

“I have seen, you know, a lot of talk and hype about music NFTs, but I am extremely skeptical of dropping songs of NFTs. I just feel that music is so devalued right now that it’s not really relevant, it doesn’t really make sense,” he said.

But Edgar—whose music background is primarily in DJing and producing—thinks music NFTs could work if they’re thought of as community assets.

“For NFTs to work with music in the future, I envision a platform where musicians are able to make music, make sounds, trade them, sell them, collect them, and it creates a new community.”

Arts

https://decrypt.co/106670/why-musician-and-ethereum-nft-artist-jimmy-edgar-is-skeptical-of-music-nfts

Interesting NFTs
Finite.
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The Harvest
An anthropomorphic figure stands, wide eyed, staring at the viewer; its body masculine, muscular, and humanoid. Its “mind” dissociates into a conglomerate of structures resembling feathers, grain, teeth–as well as a radial flower “node”, casting linear rays throughout the composition. To his left, a vat of bodies gesture and writhe in a kind of amniotic soup, attended by a video game robot. The bot's red display reads “uWu”. Behind the robot and filling the left side of the composition is an archaic figure composed of a variety of vintage objects and symbols. Among them are a hardbound book with ancient cuneiform scripts, indicating barley, beer, bread, ox, house, and sky, behind which is a grimacing, salivating jagged toothed maw; and an old Commodore floppy drive. The figure’s head tilts toward an illuminated crescent moon, suggesting the Egyptian Sacred Bull. The archaic figure is composed of a variety of mutating cells, which shift in color, and pattern; eventually breaking free into an ephemeral broadcast of bubbles which move across the background. The work came into being against a psychological introspection, which included associations to pop culture such as alien abduction and pod people, as well as quite a bit of reflection on grains as a symbol of civilization, agriculture, sustenance, life, and imbibing (mainly whiskies).
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