11/10/2022 What Is a Generative Art NFT? Inside the Algorithmic Art Revolution

Generative art is a digital art style in which artists use algorithms as a tool. It’s been adopted by NFT artists on platforms like Art Blocks.


Generative art. Image: Grant Kempster/Decrypt

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) took the world by storm in 2020, generating billions of dollars in profit for artists and collectors alike. Much of the work sold, at the start, was standard fare: digital renditions of Old Masters, eccentric photography, paintings done via iPad.

Soon, a new breed of digital artists began to experiment with the form and produce art that was more closely bound to the digital world in which it was sold. Some artists peddled complex VR art “experiences,” others designed artworks that could be computationally described by blockchain “metadata.”

Another group seized on a half-century-long artistic format that had long been overlooked yet seemed to be the perfect foil for the buzzy market: Generative art.

What is generative art?

Developed in 1965 by German philosopher Max Bense, generative art arises from algorithms programmed to specific parameters by engineer-artists. The artist defines the general process—what colors, or geometry, might be used, for instance—then feeds into the algorithm random quantities; whatever comes out is the generative artwork. Generative NFTs are much the same, and many include additional components of “randomness” related to the mechanics of the blockchain, smart contracts, and NFT “minting.”

Generative art was ideal for producing large NFT collections, going into the tens of thousands, or even millions, of unique works. Unlike profile picture (PFP) collections likeBored Ape Yacht Club, however, generative art is also better accepted by the art establishment; they are seen as a way to finally make use of the generative works dating back to the 60s, and many have been featured inmeatspace galleries.

Did you know?

The first ever exhibition of generative artwork was held in Stuttgart, Germany, by Georg Nees. Thought to have been dubbed ”Generative Computergrafik,” the exhibition included decidedly sci-fi worksfeaturingrepetitive, somewhat eerie squiggles arranged in large grids.

How do generative art NFTs work?

Generative art NFT projects make use ofEthereum’s defining feature: Thesmart contract.

Smart contracts are pieces of code that self-execute when certain external conditions are met, making them perfect for the development of randomized, computer-driven art. Sending crypto to a smart contract—which exists as a kind of blockchain-based escrow position—activates it, running code that results in generative art that is then credited to the wallet of whomever activated it.

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Take the example ofArt Blocks, a wildly popular generative artNFT marketplacethat netted just shy of $1 billion for artists in 2021. Art Blocks’s offering included works that made use of the random “hash” signatured generated when an NFT is added to the blockchain (a hash is a unique alphanumeric code that serves, to put it simply, as a kind of online address for a given asset).

In one highly subscribed series, Fidenza, buyers wouldn’t know what their chosen work would look until the hash was generated at the very moment of purchase; the Fidenza smart contract would feed the string of digits and numbers into the Fidenza algorithm, producing something surprising and unique.

Did you know?

The first big generative art NFT project was Autoglyphs, a series developed by Larva Labs, the company behind another pioneering series calledCryptoPunks. Autoglyphs are a collection of 512 strange, static-like black-and-white patterns developed on the Ethereum blockchain itself, and reached a total sales volume of $41 million.

An example of generative art which goes beyond smart contracts is the Solvency project, which used an AI mechanism called a “GAN”—generative adversarial network—to produce textured moving images based on photographs. GANs exemplify the generative process, pitting two artificial intelligences, the “generator” and the “discriminator,” against one another: the generator attempts to produce images that dupe the discriminator into verifying them as real, and the discriminator attempts to catch the generator out. The result is a learning process that produces ever-more uncanny renditions of real-life.

Who's working with generative art NFTs?

Where to buy generative art NFTs

Most generative NFTs can be bought on standard platforms like OpenSea and Nifty Gateway; other more specialized platforms like Art Blocks, Gen.Art and Brain Drops also exist.

The future of generative art NFTs

Though 2022 saw the bottom fall out of the NFT market, NFTs have given generative artists a shopfront and an audience after over 50 years of being largely ignored.

Generative artists likekvix_studiocontinue to produce fascinating and often eerily beautiful works. Meanwhile, Ethereum competitor Tezos launched generative art platform Fxhash in 2021, expanding the market yet further.

Arts

https://decrypt.co/resources/what-is-a-generative-art-nft-inside-the-algorithmic-art-revolution

Interesting NFTs
Another Day In Paradise
Just as the book speaks to intelligence, the image in all its muteness speaks to the heart.
Auto-Erotic Sphinx with Toys
In this image, a giant sphinx spoons itself in erotic play within an aquatic styled environment littered by various denizens. These creatures include symbols and archetypes both current and nostalgic–each inhabiting a rootedness within mass cultural adolescence. Among the roster are Servbots, video game inspired mushrooms, a Pacman-like creature, a distant sea faring rubber duck, creatures sporting the symbols reminiscent of popular anime, and a Pokemon-like rabbit (a novel incarnation of Ganesha indicated by the Shiva trident on its nose). In addition, a few sea creatures partly inspired by sea monsters of western antiquity conglomerate along the mid left side of the composition. The Sphinx itself is an amalgam of aquatic, fetishist, ancient Egyptian, and 80’s style adornments, both living, as in a clown fish, or material, such as a cassette tape. Nautically colored antennae receive somatic signals from the atmosphere, perhaps from the 8 Ball moon or giant ringed planet beyond.
CryptoKitties
Sup playa! I'm Kitty #450222. My friends describe me as ridiculous and raunchy. I once made a dolphin leap. Our friendship will be ridiculous, raunchy, and full of cantaloupe.
#28878
By OthersideDeployer
CryptoPunk #9373
The CryptoPunks are 10,000 uniquely generated characters. No two are exactly alike, and each one of them can be officially owned by a single person on the Ethereum blockchain. Originally, they could be claimed for free by anybody with an Ethereum wallet, but all 10,000 were quickly claimed. Now they must be purchased from someone via the marketplace that's also embedded in the blockchain.