New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

1 year ago

New artists to watch

These artists were voted on from this week’s list by members of the editorial and curation teams at SuperRare Labs.

The Way Of Hope

Edition 1 of 1

I rise to my hope, I rise to my dreams, even if I fall, I get up again every time. My shadow guides me. My thoughts light me up. Nrs1n Digital Illustration
Illustrating for over a decade, here for the art. // Embrace Minimalism // All artworks created in adobe Illustrator.

Blank Canvas

Edition 1 of 1

1/1 artwork by 0xdgb Minted on SuperRare
Multimedia Artist, student of life. Focused on illustrative storytelling through a self-proclaimed style named “Neo-Fauvism”.

Provenance

Edition 1 of 1

A new beginning. “Provenance” is the first installment in the “Stages of Life II” series. A body of work composed of narratives done in the “Neo-Fauvism” style created by YAGAMIII. Neo-Fauvism is a refined illustrative take on Fauvism exploring Color Theory & Story-Telling, a hybrid of Classical and Modern art movements. This work is based on the Greek Myth surrounding the Sister of Fate. A Trio of entities that “weave” the Destiny of us all. The Protagonist sits at the base of the Tree of Life, writing their own fate, seeking enlightenment for what’s to come.

New artists on SuperRare

POp CuLTurE eXprEssioNisM

The new Horizons

Edition 1 of 1

Refers to a new and uncharted direction or destination, often associated with exciting opportunities and possibilities.
Brazilian digital artist.

The smell of a summer storm 

Edition 1 of 1

Hand painted work using 2D digital painting software. The title comes from the fact that I think that the “smell of storm”, which was all over the air at the time of the creation of this work, left a residual impression on my mind, which flowed somehow into the painting.
Art Should Comfort The Disturbed, And Disturb The Comfortable

Angel

Edition 1 of 1

The girl has painted these wings as a way to express her emotions or as a form of self-expression. The red color of the paint and wings is significant, as red is often associated with strong emotions such as love, anger, and passion. The wings themselves symbolize hope, innocence, or a desire for freedom or escape. Overall, this art piece appears to be a poignant and introspective depiction of a young girl struggling with her emotions.
Artist Creator of the Collection „Anxiety Disorders“ Discover the Unknown

A PORTRAIT OF A KING

Edition 1 of 1

Am I SuperRare now?
Artificial Intelligence lexicographer chasing insight through art, one thought at a time.

The Manic Mind

Edition 1 of 1

The manic mind is a curious and complex creature, forever racing and tumbling through the endless expanse of thought and emotion. It is a mind that sees everything, taking in all the colors and textures of the world with a relentless hunger for more. Like a butterfly flitting from flower to flower, it hops from one idea to the next, never resting for long. It is a mind that is always on, always buzzing with energy and activity. It is able to tap into a boundless well of creativity and inspiration, able to see the world in a way that others can only imagine. A mind that is always on, always buzzing with energy and activity. With this manic energy comes a heightened sense of perception, a sharpness of all the senses that allows the mind to take in every detail of the world around it. Seeing the beauty in everything, from the tiniest blade of grass to the grandest mountain range. But with this heightened perception comes a level of sensitivity that can be overwhelming at times. The manic mind is hypersensitive to the slightest stimuli, able to pick up on even the most subtle of nuances and emotions. This sensitivity can be both a blessing and a curse. On one hand, it allows it to see the world with a clarity and depth that others can only dream of. On the other hand, it can also make it overwhelmed and exhausted, as the constant barrage of stimuli becomes too much to bear. Despite the challenges that come with this heightened sensitivity, the manic mind is able to find beauty and meaning in even the most mundane of tasks. It is a mind that is able to see the interconnectedness of all things, the patterns and rhythms that pulse through the universe. Those who possess it often find that it is a gift, one that allows them to see the world in a way that others cannot. They are able to find inspiration and creativity in even the darkest of days, and their minds are always buzzing with new ideas and possibilities. A canvas upon which to paint a thousand different stories and dreams. In this manic state of mind, anything is possible.
Photographer. Idiot.

Web 2.5

Edition 1 of 1

we’re so early tho…
abstract artist · fusing 3d & ai

palisade

Edition 1 of 1

an abstract, fluid sculpture—”palisade” represents the relationship of the protector, the nurturer.
20

SuperRare Magazine

Your frens at SuperRare Magazine.

Art

Tech

Curators' Choice

New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

1 year ago

New artists to watch

These artists were voted on from this week’s list by members of the editorial and curation teams at SuperRare Labs.

like to draw and play synths // Brasil 065  

Mantra Mirage

Edition 1 of 1

In the passage of multiverses, a glimpse of the future, a tangible reality within a mythical possibility.

frame by frame animation and music by André Gorayeb
track: Eugenia Uniflora (made with Volca Sample & PO20 Arcade)
1920x1080px

diving into the digital world

The Final Performance

Edition 1 of 1

SMASHDIRT CONTROL SYSTEM 2022©

make non figurative images and try to approach art more as practice than ideas. My work combines digital physical means.  

atom fiber useful as engine for wax & invisible metals search

Edition 1 of 1

many other digital paintings were destroyed to feed this one

10000×7111 pixels
by santiago,
using gimp, inkscape, p5js.

New artists on SuperRare

Sathar in me is the Sathar in you.  

ZEPHYR [Human:Ai:0.5]

Edition 1 of 1

The Genesis. Grateful for the knowledge and experience from the journey Sathar has been on. Passed through the thick clouds of human memories (Ai), seek an order from disorder.
The journey of finding the true self will never end.
Zephyr, take me to the emptiest place, a place without a doubt.

Methods:
Hand-drawn animation
Ai Generative animation
Ai Generative music

MP4 60 FPS
1744 x 3100px

2022 Made in Internet

Nedu is self taught visual artist, painting dynamic portraits and telling stories! its progress over perfection.  

The devil you know

Edition 1 of 1

In moments of uncertainties sometimes the devil you know is better than the angel you don’t.
So as you keep your friends close, keep a closer eye on your enemies.

Artist

War Side

Edition 1 of 1

AI Fashion character present in the context of the events of the last period: war and pandemic connected by the gas mask.

Landscape photographer from Canada with huge focus on the lesser visited and extremely remote locations.  

Earth’s Embrace

Edition 1 of 1

When deciding which photograph would become my SuperRare genesis I knew at heart that it needed to be from the forest.

BC’s temperate rainforest is my favorite place to go when I need to be immersed in nature, and my images of it are what I have become best known for. I often receive comments from people who see my images without my name attached and still immediately recognize the photograph as mine. I’ve been a landscape photographer for over 10 years now and have worked very hard to develop my style, creating photographs that have a bit of myself embedded in them. I’m also drawn to the rainforest because it’s ideal for self expression — everybody interprets the chaotic, green puzzle differently.

This particular location is quite close to my heart and I find myself constantly returning to it, spending hundreds of hours wandering the trails, wading through the canyon or simply just sitting and observing. It is a natural form of therapy where all my worries and stress fade away. For a moment, life becomes simple and I savor every second of it.

Despite all of my time spent here, I had never seen the area covered in heavy fog. For context, canyons are always a struggle to get fog into as the fog needs to be extremely thick. When it’s not thick enough, it simply floats above the canyon rather than going inside. This canyon is also located in a spot on the mountain where fog simply doesn’t accumulate often.

But then one day it happened and we had a huge, long lasting spell of fog roll in. I spent an entire day roaming around the forest and canyon in the fog. It was the most powerful flow state I’ve ever managed to enter, going from one composition to the next, the camera becoming a perfectly natural extension of my body and mind. After spending so much time over the years and getting to know this place so well, I had accumulated a decent amount of compositions in my head that I was waiting to shoot in perfect conditions. This day was perfect and the photograph you see here is one of those.

Thank you for reading. If you’d like to see a brief video version of my journey, you can do so here.

My name is Favor, and I’m Visual artist creating realms with charcoal with the aim  of providing surreal feel.  

The Late Bloomer

Edition 1 of 1

I always believed I would still shine eventually, a late bloomer. The flower that is glorified long after the sun comes up.

A blend of charcoal and architecture in an overall world of dark art.

Chaotic mystic >>> ex0planetary animist  

The Sednian Delta

Edition 1 of 1

In the merging waters coming out of the sinuous valleys of Sedna were formed the crystal chimneys. Heavy minerals from older eras eventually sedimented and oxidized in the magnetic anomalies. Caught in elliptical orbit for millenaries, generations of refugees from the scattered disKs piled up on the hills of these ore sanctuaries, amalgamating multicultural idiosyncrasies in perpetual motion with the eternal tides.

Remote from their roots, settlers are blessed with the manifestations of ancestral gods in the natural phenomena, wondering whether they will recuperate the language of the magic and understand their purpose so far in the dark.

Artist who loves to create art related to architecture  

Empathy

Edition 1 of 1

We are doing a little something extra for anyone. And these are the days that hold all time together.

Merry everything and be happy always.

42

SuperRare Magazine

Your frens at SuperRare Magazine.

Art

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Curators' Choice

Art Angels: the Digital and Physical Blur

Art Angels: the Digital and Physical Blur

Fall Set Blend” by Michael Callas, 2022. From “Textures of Us: A Metaphysical Experience” curated by Art Angels.

Art Angels: the Digital and Physical Blur

1 year ago

The physical space of Art Angels Gallery in LA.

Spaces are independent galleries on SuperRare that curate, promote, and sell artworks. Anyone can submit an application. The SuperRare Spaces are varied in sizes, philosophies, and levels of experience but all centered around the same mission: to push forward decentralized curation and promote crypto artists from all over the world.

Art Angels gallery is “determined to support a greater presence of female artists and thought leaders into the NFT space.” During “Meta Spectrum”, an exhibition in collaboration with SuperRare, Art Angels bridged the gap between digital and physical art, and the gallery’s focus was, always has been, and continues to be, empowering strong artists who aren’t always in the spotlight. Now, it’s one of SuperRare’s newest Spaces. SuperRare curator Mika Bar On Nesher invites Connor Senay from Art Angels to talk about the gallery, its philosophy, and cryptoart.

 

Mika Bar On Nesher: What made you want to apply to become a SuperRare Space?

Connor Senay: As an innovative gallery intent on exploring all new frontiers of art, we quickly realized the value of being a positive contributor and community organizer in Web3. Acknowledging SuperRare as the premier marketplace for 1/1 art, most similar to our Los Angeles gallery, we wanted to become involved with the $RARE community in a way that echoed our mission of artist empowerment for as large of a community as possible. After connecting with Paloma, a wonderful business developer and curator for SuperRare, at her inaugural curation and collaboratively hosting a metaphysical exhibition in our gallery space, we knew this would be a fruitful partnership worth growing in every possible avenue.

Aesthetic bliss accompanied by a meaningful narrative is our mantra, and we wanted to bring that from 3D to Web3.

MBON: How do you see the bridge between physical and digital galleries evolving in the coming months?

CS: Since the influx of NFT frames, we’ve seen the capabilities of physical galleries to partner with digitally native ones and exhibit works on a variety of immersive displays. Our metaphysical exhibitions, “Meta Spectrum” and “Textures of Us,” are exemplary of the imminent fusion between these two worlds as we showcased a multitude of physical works that accompanied the NFTs on display. We have a 36 square-foot digital canvas installed in our exhibition space to bring a greater understanding to our collectors of how cryptoart is changing how we experience art.

Vellum LA, a gallery on Melrose Ave which specializes in NFT showcases, is one of our favorite examples of cutting-edge, breathtaking technology brought to its audience in an approachable way.

Tribute to Kobe” by Ignacio Gana, 2022. From “Textures of Us: A Metaphysical Experience” curated by Art Angels.

 MBON: What are some of the challenges of running a Space? What advice do you have for collectives or galleries that are thinking of applying in the next Space Race?  

CS: Running a Space requires having a pulse on the movement of Web3 on a consistent basis and being deliberate with your curations i.e. theme, artists chosen, etc. Make sure that every aspect of releasing a curation is done with careful intent. Marketing is also crucial on all possible fronts from all parties involved.

Engaging with colleagues or collectors in the space is highly valuable as well. This space moves incredibly quickly, and it can be difficult to find a perfect selection of artists, so it is useful to gauge what they’ve seen from your genre of choice that excites them.

MBON: What are important pillars for you when selecting artists? 

CS: When we select artists, we care deeply about their intent to create and letting their work evolve with them. We are genuinely elated to receive new works and showcase them, and we seek artists who feel that same way about creating and sharing.

Artists with a story and sentiment behind their work resonate most with us as we are keen on telling these stories to engage collectors and illustrate deeper meanings.

MBON: Do you think traditional collectors will start entering the scene? Do you find an interest from the traditional art world? 

CS: Traditional collectors will enter the scene in two ways: by genuine, independent curiosity and by education from galleries like us. It is imperative to educate people on the wonder and opportunity that lies within the cryptoart scene. Many art enthusiasts who enter our gallery to see physical works end up even more awe-struck by the Eleusis Digital Canvas gracing our exhibition space. It is an undeniable demonstration of the versatility of cryptoart, and as a gallery, we’ve found accompanying the physical artwork with a digital asset for provenance purposes resonates most with traditional collectors who are in the process of learning about the schematics of Web3.

Pink Noise” byDavid Uessem, 2022. From “Textures of Us: A Metaphysical Experience” curated by Art Angels.

Running a Space requires having a pulse on the movement of Web3 on a consistent basis and being deliberate with your curations i.e. theme, artists chosen, etc.

— Connor Senay

MBON: Who are some of your favorite artists in the space currently? 

CS: We love our entire artist roster currently featured in our Space for their love of creation, varied aesthetics and rich stories behind their works (Michael Callas, David Uessem, Flore, Ignacio Gana, Floyd Strickland, Abieyuwa, Jekein Lato-Unah, Blessing Atas, Yinkore).

Outside of who we’ve curated, our favorite artists in the space are Micah Johnson, Sinclair, Jesse Draxler, Amber Vittoria, Lethabo, Claire Salvo, Tjo, Mediolanum, nishant, Schauermann, Lindsey Price, Grant Yun, Rich Caldwell, Reuben Wu, Tishk Barzanji, mae, hemily, Bumpy, UntitledArmy, Killer Acid…the list could go on forever, but those are a selection of who we are always eager to see as they release new works. The eclecticism of that list is why we love this space.

MBON: Tell us a little about your mission as a SuperRare Space, what do you have to achieve in the far future?

CS: Our mission is to empower underappreciated artists, curate magnificently creative minds and build a community around a love of art. A multitude of our physical artists have digital origins, so it has been a pleasure to onboard them into this Space to allow their native creations to flourish in a new, unprecedented light. 

We want to become a digital sanctuary that fosters meaningful arts & technology discussions, provides insight for what’s to come, and assists artists and collectors in understanding Web3 to the fullest. Immersion is the future, and we are adamant on bringing the digital to life in unforeseen ways through this forward-thinking Space.

Heading Downtown” by Flore, 2022. From “Textures of Us: A Metaphysical Experience” curated by Art Angels.

37

Mika Bar On Nesher

Mika is a writer and filmmaker based in NYC. They are a Curator at SuperRare @superraremika  

Art

Tech

Curators' Choice

Meet Chile Con Carne: SuperRare’s Spiciest Space

Meet Chile Con Carne: SuperRare’s Spiciest Space

Envenenadas” by Donatelly, 2022. From Histeria Colectiva” curated by Epifania de Gracia.

Meet Chile Con Carne: SuperRare’s Spiciest Space

1 year ago

Spaces are independent galleries on SuperRare that curate, promote, and sell artworks. Anyone can submit an application. The SuperRare Spaces are varied in sizes, philosophies, and levels of experience but all centered around the same mission: to push forward decentralized curation and promote crypto artists from all over the world.

Meet Chile Con Carne, the SuperRare Space run by artist and curator Epifania de Gracia. As the Space states about its philosophy, “historically chili con carne was cooked to celebrate victory in battle. Aztecs prepared tomatoes and chiles, the meat was to be the flesh of the conquistadors. Our story is all about that: Flesh and Resistance!” SuperRare curator Mika Bar On Nesher sat down with Epifana to get a better understanding of the story behind this boundary pushing digital gallery and art collective that celebrates erotism, womanhood. Their mission? To fight for an equal representation of women, LGBTQIA+, disidencia, and minorities into the NFT world. This SuperRare Space has a DIY grassroots spirit dedicated to challenging the status quo, which is what Web3 is all about.

Mika Bar On Nesher: Chile Con Carne is not only a digital gallery, but also an art collective. What did you see was lacking in the NFT space when you put together your Space proposal?

Epifania de Gracia: When I began to mint, I felt a bit lonely as a woman creating erotic cryptoart, I figured that corporeality was absent from the market, was misrepresented, avatarized, infantilized. There was no room for flesh, for stretch marks, overweight girls, onanism or rebellion! As a digital painter and Bella Artes lover, I wasn’t satisfied, I was seeking for more stimulation, more speech, so I began to look for peers, other subversive / unconventional artists who I could relate to. I started to encourage and help my friends to create their own wallets and adventure into the cryptoart world. From nothing I became in charge of a small group of motivated creators, and when I heard about the first Space Race I immediately saw the logic to create a Space where sensuality, identities and desires could be observed from another angle, far from taboos and merchandising. A virtual refuge for outcasts was needed so I ran 3 times, spent weeks without sleeping and reached a bunch of $RARE holders to present my project. It was the closest to a political campaign I had ever done, I held vote by vote until I won the third Space race!

Censored” by Epifania de Gracia, 2022. From Histeria Colectiva” curated by Epifania de Gracia.

To inaugurate Chile Con Carne Space I curated an exhibition named “Histeria Colectiva”, to immediately make a statement: re-appropriation of hysteria is a central concept of (sex positive) feminism, a protolanguage serving simultaneously as an index of forms of gender oppression and a space to stage resistance to it. I consider myself a sex positivist feminist activist, my art reflects it in so many aspects, I refuse to be a victim, the weaker sex, the piece of meat. I own my body, I’m proud of it, of all its imperfections – journey to acceptance wasn’t easy, Art was fundamental to achieve it, that’s where Epiphany and Grace comes! I own my pleasure and it comes first, I’m empowered enough to choose violence, pornography or even sado-masochism as paths for freedom if I wanted to. I repudiate censorship, my call is to liberate not to cancel, I advocate for inclusiveness, for tolerance. Because the Hysteria is collective as the struggles I was obsessed with by inviting as many talents as possible, to spotlight women creators, to bring new artists to the ecosystem. Artists who create unique and rare artworks.

“Collective Hysteria” could also be easily understood as a criticism of our convulsive epoch, taken as an invitation to calm down, to reflect further, to make love and not war! From Magnetismo and Cristina Vela‘s innocence to Oona and Iris Kauf‘s insolence, you meet Michelle Thompson with whom we built one of the first bridges between Spaces, her work as well as Margaret Murphy‘s one is a profound reflexion about identity, on how women are related with their image, on how they are perceived and perceive themselves inside the mold of our traditional western cultures.

Two Faced” by Michelle Thompson, 2022. From Histeria Colectiva” curated by Epifania de Gracia.

Esra Eslen brings us to eastern frontiers of consciousness, reminds us how fantasies and fantasy are inextricably linked, how dreams are an integral part of our existences and why Poetry is vital. Poetry, a common thread of “Histeria Colectiva”, traversing the work of Donatelly, who transforms a simple kiss into a symbol of life, death, sin and mutation. Vanessa del Rey, a Marvel and DC Comic artist gives us her first crypto artistic work, an exclusive and NSFW woman (and her shadow) laying down offered and empowered. In a similar position but this time offered to herself, to her awakening, “Despertar”, of La Saló is one of the masterpieces shown in this exhibition, a radical animation made with a very classic Latin American line stroke. The first and last nod to sex positivism is found in the work of BER who, in addition to being a visionary artist, is a Neo-Reichian therapist. I know It’s a long list, can make you feel a bit dizzy, could even give you some Florence syndrome but I really want to use this tribune to call out collectors and the audience in general to explore, to risk themselves, to raise the stakes. A proper collection must include emergent artists, you have to bet on the future!

MBON: In your experience as an artist and a leader in the space, how is the Cryptoart movement disrupting the traditional art market?

EdG: I never bought into the showy vernissage mood. I believe if you don’t come from art school you will never feel really at ease visiting a traditional art gallery. Cryptoart on the other hand, doesn’t require a dress code or having to do small talk. Allows you to focus on the artwork, lets you spend whatever time you need to observe and understand it.

Discovering cryptoart, being a digital artist was a personal revolution. Before it, I couldn’t find a way out to commercialize my work, I was thinking of abandoning art forever and dedicate myself to a conventional 9 to 5 job. Instead I can now focus on creation, dialogue with collectors all over the world and I even have the chance to curate some of the artists I have always admired. I believe cryptoart will reach or overtake the volume of the traditional art market, a market more than contaminated by counterfeits, by administrative and physical limitations as transport and storage. Ease of use and transfer, transparency, legitimacy will bring massive adoption with millions of screens broadcasting art everywhere!

MBON: What is the story behind the name Chile Con Carne?

EdG: The Carne part is the most important, it’s our statement, it means meat, flesh, resistance! It refers to the Bodies, speaking about corporeality is a constant in Latam artistic expression. Explanation lies in centuries of abuse, from colonization to liberalism, bodies have been massacred. In Chile and all over the continent, bodies are missing, were kidnaped, tortured, raped, destroyed. Inhumane workloads crush them daily, prehistoric cults make them bend down, blame them, forbid them. Imposed standards elaborated in London, Paris or NY shame them because they don’t meet them and never will. They are crowded into unlivable housing, into transportations where all traits of intimacy and comfort are erased. Ill by food and chemicals long forbidden in the northern hemisphere. Humiliated by infinite debts and a forever guilt. Per contra into the flesh, into the carnality, there is also a findable escape to this fatality, an attainable enlightenment. When rid of the notion of sin, freed from marketing, carnality becomes resilient, capable of all kinds of mutations and connections. Blood pulsed by the seek of pleasure and liberation, genetically invaded by the need to survive, the flesh is the catalyst of all our desires and sensations, the unique proof of our humanity, made to dance, to caress, to feel, to desire. Sacrificed bodies become sanctified, they protect, embrace, perpetuate, they create and resist. 

The Carne part is the most important, it’s our statement, it means meat, flesh, resistance! It refers to the Bodies, speaking about corporeality is a constant in Latam artistic expression.

— Epifania de Gracia

MBON: How do you select your artists? Are they all a part of your direct community or do you seek out like-minded creators? What advice do you have for artists who want to be represented by your Space?

EdG: Have you seen the TV show “Mozart in the Jungle”? Like Rodrigo (Gael García Bernal), I curate with blood! I think the job consists of picking sincere artworks, pieces with strong speech and aesthetic statements. No matter the medium, I try to offer an off-the-beaten-track and sensual selection, away from trends, from hashtags. I consider that almost everything can become beautiful and attractive, it depends how you look at it, the flow with which you represent it. I love to seek for another kind of beauty, less common, more distorted, far from the traditional canons. What I really love about curation is that it connects me with universes I couldn’t reach alone as an artist, and takes me out of my comfort zone. I could give you the example of my friend Maritei, she made me discover the codes of Kawaii Art, you cannot imagine how baroque and pink are hiding a message of rebelliousness and insubmission. Yes Kawaii is feminist!

I’ve met all the artists first through the internet, less Donatelly, she is a Latam night icon with her drag character Catarsis and I met her on a dancefloor. Everyday I spotlight artists on Chile Con Carne Twitter & Instagram accounts “ ” means that your Art is hot and that I want to work with you!

MBON: Tell us about any exciting upcoming drops or events we can look out for? Unlike some other SuperRare Spaces, you run and fund everything yourself. Who is helping you operate the space? Tell us more about what role the community plays in your Space?

EdG: Like many others I have more ideas than resources, for example, after talking to you Mika, I was left with the bug of opening a physical space, I’m now trying to find the funds to transform my apartment into a gallery! This year I’ve dedicated myself almost 100% to Chile Con Carne, I finance everything with the earnings from the sale of my paintings, sometimes I had to front alone delays or lack of compromise, not everyone understand yet cryptoart’s potentials, but despite the difficulty, Chile Con Carne is my baby, I project its space as I would with a IRL gallery, I want to constantly offer new temporary exhibitions, You should expect to see a lot of nipples, a lot of flesh, I want to get the most out of it from Web3 censorship resistance! Right now and because celebrations are coming I’m preparing something special with Luluxxx, her art makes you want to dance and drink champagne. What better way to begin 2023 than with her glamor and sensuality ? 

It’s really important for me to finish this interview shouting out to my fellow Playboy x Sevens grantee, Oona. She has been present since the beginning, she understood before everyone the Chile Con Carne concept and has been on the front line to defend it. She is actually presenting “Milk to Mint” in Art Basel Miami, a performance you cannot miss! 

I want to send the biggest thanks to who is behind the curtains, my friends Elisabet Montenegro and Jacqueline Herrera, they two are an unfailing source of inspiration and guidance, I couldn’t have done it without their wise advice and their beautiful writings.

Tropical Room” by BER, 2022. From Histeria Colectiva” curated by Epifania de Gracia.

37

Mika Bar On Nesher

Mika is a writer and filmmaker based in NYC. They are a Curator at SuperRare @superraremika  

Art

Tech

Curators' Choice

Out of the Vault and onto the Chain: the Evolving Nature of Provenance

Out of the Vault and onto the Chain: the Evolving Nature of Provenance

Hedrons #320” by ANiMAtttiC, 2022

Out of the Vault and onto the Chain: the Evolving Nature of Provenance

1 year ago

It’s almost cliche to say NFTs have transformed provenance, but it’s true. Blockchain technology grants artworks a transparent record of origin, ownership, and sales history. It deters forgery. It streamlines valuation. And yet, perhaps more interesting than blockchain’s influence on artwork provenance is on-chain provenance’s influence on artwork value. Provenance has become a social experience in the Web3 space, with its newfound visibility not only recording simple transactions, but bestowing lore, necessitating interaction, and impacting long-term value.

For comparison, look at how provenance and collecting unfold in the trad art world: IRL, if a respected artist or tastemaker publicly collects the work of an unknown creator, that person gets reborn as a rising star, an artist to watch. But the art those collectors buy often gets locked behind closed doors–like a candle suffocating beneath a glass–never to be experienced by the general populace, with no visible record of ownership. These influential collectors add value to public perceptions of an artist and the price they pay affects a piece’s future valuation, but the public often never gets to see those pieces, enjoy them, or decide for themselves how they feel about the art, its quality, or its value. Instead, we’re expected to trust in the discerning eye and baseless promise of a Town Car backseat with a country club membership.

As it’s been for centuries, those determining the value of art have mostly been a small class of obscenely wealthy people who buy, sell, and trade works among themselves to inflate their values and profit without giving artists’ efforts a second thought. Hiding art from those of us on the ground ensures that we don’t have any direct sway in dictating the direction of culture. And if I’ve learned anything from being one of the normals, existing in art spaces dominated by people who have never worked a service industry job, it’s that plenty of old money types, CEOs, celebrities, and trad financiers, have awful (and I cannot emphasize this enough: awful) taste. As it turns out, there’s no real money in fighting the status quo.

But in the cryptoart space, we see everything. Provenance is laid bare before us, its cracks and shadows shaping the value of each artwork. Even someone without the means to buy a piece of art can make a lowball bid, engraving their appreciation on-chain indefinitely and immutably. It’s a version of provenance that isn’t directly tied to ownership, but rather something more akin to interpersonal curation, an endorsement perhaps. In this sense, community members, including ones who do not own art, have a hand in the tastemaking, and therefore the determination of value. 

This is not to say influential voices don’t shape value in cryptoart. Of course they do. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard someone legitimize an artist by informing me that XCOPY bought their genesis. The difference is that value isn’t trapped in the society pages of a fine art rag or whispered from a gallerist to an oil baron’s wife or an A-list actor’s assistant. Instead, it’s detailed in a real-time immutable record that catalogs all transactions on-chain. This amplified visibility of provenance in the cryptoart space gives 1/1 artists a leg up if they’re lucky enough to catch the eye of a prominent collector or artist. A career reshaped in mere seconds by the click of a button. 

Provenance in real-time: An unfolding example

Most cryptoart platforms show recent sales, artist and collector leaderboards, and sales volume on their homepages. But unlike the way provenance works in the traditional art market, in the cryptoart scene, provenance is interactive; a living social experience. Earlier this year on SuperRare, ANiMAtttiC and Acid Boy topped the sales charts1 (both artists are still within the year’s top ten in terms of number of works sold). ANiMAtttiC’s “Hedrons” collection and Acid Boy’s regular drops are not only quality art but, in comparison to much of the work on SuperRare, they’re affordable, coming in usually at 0.05 ETH to 1 ETH. The combination of these two factors prompted more buyers to buy, which in turn was recorded by the recent sales feed on the homepage, immediately visible to all collectors visiting the site. The result? A real-time, evolving record of well-known artists and collectors who scrambled to own a piece of the project – spinning the buyer feeding frenzy flywheel. “Hedrons” is a great example–not only is it about owning a work by ANiMAtttiC, but it’s about owning a piece from that specific series. “I’ve definitely had people pick up ‘Hedrons’ and then there be a domino effect of people who love them and suddenly they all get into collectors’ hands,” they told me over DM. “It’s quite amazing to see, I feel very connected to those holding ‘Hedrons’ and my single editions, the whole thing has really saved my life.” 

ANiMAtttiC explained how this domino effect can propel the creation of community: “I also believe this entire space is about forming connections and relationships, and having a piece picked up by a collector with a big following helps connect you with more people that might enjoy your work.” It’s not just artists who get connected to collectors, but collectors connecting with the whole NFT ecosystem. They pointed out that if collectors form relationships with artists and others can see that they support creators, “communities start to form around you.” Considering that owners of “Hedrons” include artists like Moxarra Gonzalez, Oficinas TK, and Mattia Cuttini, as well as plenty of whale collectors and even SuperRare Labs’ own CEO, it’s easy to see how the social properties of provenance helped “Hedrons” explode in popularity.

Hedron #313” by ANiMAtttiC, 2022

“Hedrons” are a collection of non-generative 1/1s, each piece being entirely unique. But when it comes to serialized art with different properties, provenance also plays a new and unanticipated role. Recently, I had the opportunity to speak with artists Anne Spalter and Pindar Van Arman about serialized artwork. Anne’s “AI Spaceships” and Pindar’s “bitGAN Collabs,” both series dropped via Pindar and Justin Highland’s sovrn.art–a service that assists artists in building custom smart contracts that grant them complete sovereignty over their works–function as pieces of art, but incorporate some ideological aspects of PFPs and collectibles. Here, they define serials as families of unique and connected images–Anne’s “AI Spaceships,” for example, consists of over 500 AI images that the artist touched up by hand. She said each individual piece took about as long for her to make as any other piece of art, but like PFP projects, “AI Spaceships” is a limited collection where each image features traits varying in rarity. The series launched the “first community” she really felt around her art, she said, in part because she could set a lower price for serial artwork “without cannibalizing [her] market,” and a lower price brings in more collectors. Further, serialized art coupled with a collector community presented the potential for an evolving narrative–”AI Spaceships” is about a future in which the Earth has become uninhabitable due to climate change–and the aspect of trait rarity encourages buying, selling, trading, and conversation. Ultimately, it builds community. 

“Community is the most important part,” Pindar said in regard to serials. But in order to get there, you need to reach a “critical mass” of collectors. The value of a serial artwork is shaped not just by its individual merits or provenance (i.e., the artist, chain of collectors, or work itself), but also by the reputation of the collectors of other artworks in the series, how their pieces were valued, and how those people interact with one another. Blockchain’s impact on artwork value is quadratic: A community, with its collectors and the history it builds over time, becomes an aspect of the provenance. This is something innovative and exciting in the world of fine art.

Spark” by Acid Boy, 2022

Provenance in multiplicity 

Though generative art doesn’t necessarily need blockchain to live, the technology has certainly provided these collections with the space to thrive. And while, like serialized 1/1s, simply being part of the same collection can drive interest due to provenance, generative art also incorporates a different aspect of creative coding. Generative art is produced by an automated system, typically built by the artist themselves. Not only does a collector have a unique piece of art–part of the same collection by the same artist, allowing them to share the experience of collecting with other collectors–but the generative system, most often an algorithm, is in itself a piece of art, created by an artist. This is one of the driving factors behind the popularity of generative collections like Matt Kane’s “Gazers” or Jen Stark’s “Vorex.” As a collector you don’t simply own a piece of art, but a piece of art generated by a piece of art–a unique case when a tool built by an artist is the artist, too.

And as blockchain has fostered new definitions of provenance concerning 1/1 art, it also has opened doors for artists working with editions. While some mediums, like printmaking, are more conducive to editions than others, traditionally, art produced in editions is valued lower than 1/1 art (the 1/1 art is rarer, after all). But, as is the case with collections and serialized art, the owners of editions matter. I bought an edition of Paramnesia by yakim because I liked it, but when I looked to see who else owned one, I noticed Mexican artist Neurocolor’s name in the token’s history. As an appreciator of his art, it felt exciting to find myself connected to him via ownership. 

I just checked–he still owns one. Did this influence my decision to buy? No. Will it influence my decision not to sell? No. But there’s something validating about it, knowing we share taste. Me? And Neurocolor? Liking the same art? Maybe I’m good at this whole aesthetic thing after all.

The bottom line is that when it comes to cryptoart, community is built into provenance; really, they’ve become inseparable. I can’t say what the future holds, but it wouldn’t shock me to one day find that community even supersedes it. This is the true revelation of the marriage between provenance and blockchain, setting fire to the old ways of art collecting that separate art from people and people from each other, that allow only select elitists in, making space for the those who want to build something together, to sift through the ashes of dead structures, to find better ways to relate to one another over art. Provenance is no longer only about names scribbled on checks and passed from heirs to auction houses, cementing the place of a painting on the walls of an Upper East Side mansion. It’s not a tool for fraud to cower behind. It’s not a means of gatekeeping. Now, provenance is about decentralizing the art of tastemaking. It allows everyone to be a curator, even if they’re not trying. It’s evolved into the antithesis of what it’s been for centuries, a sure sign of a new age in art.

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Oliver Scialdone

Oliver Scialdone is a queer writer and artist based in Brooklyn, NY. They earned a dual-MFA from The New School, and their work can be found in Peach Mag, ImageOut Write, and elsewhere. They used to host the reading series Satellite Lit and they're the Associate Editor at SuperRare Magazine.

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