NAB
NFTs are something social satirist William Gibson might have
invented. The couture of attaching the value of a Manhattan apartment to a
digital asset like a jpeg seems to signify a culture gone ever so slightly
insane.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/what-is-the-value-of-an-nft/
Yet the $69 million and change paid at auction in March
for Everydays: The First 5000 Days, a collage by US artist Mike Winkelmann
(aka Beeple) has the Technorati scratching their heads. NFTs are after all
just tokens representing ownership of digital objects that anyone can
download in seconds.
igital image that lives somewhere on the web and can be
captured on a screenshot or right-click-download, is so alien it seems either
idiotic or ironic,” says Gian Volpicelli, a senior editor at Wired.
To make the NFT market even harder to understand, it seems
the value of digital art is not judged on quality alone. Jamie Burke, founder
and CEO of blockchain investment firm Outlier Ventures, told Wired that he made
the mistake of buying visually striking pieces when he began dabbling in NFTs.
“A lot of people would buy low-aesthetic,
self-referential stuff,” Burke says: NFTs linked to memes, cryptocurrency
cartoons, or badly-drawn characters. He says he realized that in this sphere,
aesthetics count for nothing.
“I moved from aesthetics to memetics. NFTs are a form of
social media: it’s not just something to put on a wall. It’s more like a
membership of a club or cult.”
Yet proponents of NFT purport to be solving the
near-impossibility of monetizing digital artworks.
“As a mechanism, NFTs make it possible to assign value to
digital art, which opens the door to a sea of possibility for a medium that is
unbridled by physical limitations,” Noah Davis, an art specialist at
Christie’s, told Wired.
The innate difference between NFT and other forms of crypto
make it uniquely suited to digital art, argues Volpicelli.
Cryptocurrencies just like conventional currencies are by
nature made up of perfectly swappable, units: my two bitcoins are worth the
same as your two bitcoins, he explains.
In other words, it is fungible.
Currency and crypto units are also, fractionable into
smaller units — dollars can be broken down to cents, bitcoins to particles
called satoshis.
NFTs on the other hand (which are cryptocurrency assets
developed according to special Ethereum standards ERC-721 and ERC-1155), are
unique and indivisible; fungible.
“Where a bitcoin is comparable to a dollar bill, an NFT can
be likened to a cat, a sculpture, or a painting: you can’t sell part of it
without spoiling the whole, and its value is rather subjective,” he says.
“Those characteristics render NFTs a good metaphor for art.”
Digital art, specifically.
Sure, everyone can download Beeple’s images from his
Instagram feed, but that is missing the point, says Vincent Harrison, a New
York gallerist quoted in Wired. “Anyone can see pictures on the internet
of the most expensive artworks; posters are sold in museums,” he says. “But
it’s the ownership that creates value.”
And with NFTS you have ownership on the blockchain, so that
ownership is transparent for everyone to see. Even better, blockchains are also
able to keep track in a secure, immutable way, of how a token originated and
changed hands over time.
Digital artists can take advantage of this since NFTs can be
designed to pay their creators a cryptocurrency fee every time they change
hands. If a buyer of an artist’s NFT resells it (a key trend in the speculative
NFT market), the artist automatically receives a percentage of the price paid.
It’s a royalty in perpetuity unlike any transaction in the traditional art
world.
The nature of the technology is breaking down other barriers
to the elite art scene.
“Here, there are no gatekeepers,” says Twobadour,
one-half of the duo that bought Beeple’s $69 million piece at Christie’s. “The
accessibility that you have to these [NFT] platforms for the artists themselves
is revolutionary.”
For example, the Museum of Crypto Art is an NFT
art gallery hosted on a VR platform featuring a “permanent gallery” of 160
artworks including Beeple’s Into the Ether #198.
Digital artist Andrea Bonaceto thinks that the method might
even spur new forms of digital art blending digital imagery, music and
technology.
“You can create hybrids of art and music, or of art and
literature and link both of them to a token. You can use smart contracts
[self-executing routines that can be programmed onto a blockchain], so that the
artwork changes over time,” he says. “This totally opens up an artist’s
creativity.”
Peak NFT?
The sale of Beeple’s $69,346,250 NFT may be the currency’s
high water mark, but the craze is not going away. The NFT market tracker NonFungible.com recorded
more than 45,000 new wallets (an app needed to purchase NFT) interacting for
the first time with the NFTs in April to June.
“These figures point to the evidence that there has been a
very sharp increase in the number of new addresses active in the NFT ecosystem.
This is due in part to the record sale of Beeple as well as the global media
coverage of NFTs, bringing a wave of new users into the ecosystem.”
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