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British auction house Christie’s Plans to Sell 9 Rare Cryptopunk NFTs Next Month 

British auction house Christie’s Plans to Sell 9 Rare Cryptopunk NFTs Next Month Next month in New York, the popular auction house Christie’s plans to auction a rare lot of Cryptopunk non-fungible token (NFT) collectibles. The sample of work sold will be approximately nine rare Punks, courtesy of the project’s creators Larva Labs. Nine Rare Cryptopunks Going to Auction On May 13, 2021, the British auction house founded […]

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NFTs ‘ten times better’ than traditional art, says Beeple’s $69M NFT buyer

Winner of landmark auction breaks down his investment thesis on NFTs.

Nonfungible tokens are “ten times better than their physical counterparts”, according to digital art collector MetaKovan.

The pseudonymous art patron, who was recently revealed to be blockchain entrepreneur Vingaresh Sundaresan, bought the NFT of Beeple’s “EVERYDAYS: THE FIRST 5000 DAYS” for $69 million dollars earlier this year.

Explaining the motives behind his purchase in an exclusive interview with Cointelegraph, MetaKovan pointed out that NFTs have a number of advantages over traditional artworks: they are easy to transfer, they don’t have any storage costs, and their ownership can be shared. Also, they can democratize the art world by making it more easily accessible to digital artists all over the world, regardless of their nationality and social background.

MetaKovan even said that NFTs will bring crypto into the mainstream. 

"A lot of people are going to get introduced to crypto by NFTs", he explained. 

The art patron dismissed concerns about the potential risks of a speculative bubble growing in the NFT market. He thinks the frenzy around NFTs serves the purpose of accelerating adoption.

“If there is speculation, that’s ok, because we are making everything fast”, he said.

According to MetaKovan,  the NFT market will eventually influence the price of large cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum.

That could happen “in a year or so, when a lot more people will be using NFTs”, MetaKovan said.

Check out the full interview on our Youtube channel and don’t forget to subscribe!

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Superchief opens first-ever gallery dedicated to NFT art in New York City

Located in Union Square, the location will display NFTs on auction on high-res screens.

Mainstream adoption of nonfungible tokens doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon as the first-ever art gallery dedicated solely to NFT-backed art has opened in New York City. 

Superchief, an artist collective that operates galleries in New York and Los Angeles, announced the launch of the new gallery in the Union Square neighborhood. The gallery will display NFTs via a collaboration with Blackdove, a manufacturer of high-resolution digital art display screens.

The first exhibition, titled “Season One Starter Pack” (possibly a nod to the video game/digitial art cultural crossover) casts a wide net, featuring over 300 artists. Each of the artists will be auctioning a one-of-one NFT of their displayed work, as well as a 72-print drop. The gallery will be accepting cryptocurrency as well as credit card payments.

The exhibition joins a spate of dubious “first-ever” claims from various galleries and museums around the world eager to display NFT-based work — dubious because Cryptopunks were on display in galleries as early as 2017, and pioneers like Kevin Abosch have been displaying blockchain-based art well before NFTs were even a concept.

Russia’s Hermitage museum will be hosting a NFT exhibition set to include works from artists like Abosch, and on Friday, a museum in Beijing opened what it claimed to be the first “major” NFT exhibition.

Likewise, critic, collector and artist Kenny Schacter is planning a dual physical-and-virtual show at German gallery Nagel Draxler on April 9, possibly a world’s first, which will run simultaneously in the Metaverse at the Museum of Crypto Art and the Museum of Contemporary Digital Art.

The spree of institutions follows a now-legendary run of NFT headlines over the last few months. Once considered a technical niche, NFTs are now seemingly everywhere — even on the evening news. Likewise, major media publications which traditionally have ignored blockchain entirely are now covering NFTs, in part due to the absurd sums of money flooding into the space. This month, legendary auction house Christie’s sold a work by digital artist Beeple for over $69 million.

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Nifty News: Sophia the Robot sells $1M worth, Cardano to clone NFT platforms, and more

Sophia the Robot has generated more than $1 million in NFT sales, Bhad Bhabie is dropping NFTs to help the “troubled teen industry”, Cardano trying to convince top NFT platforms to port over.

If creative self-doubt and competition between humans in the art world weren’t already hard enough, artists now face the prospect of battling it out on Nifty Gateway with artistic robots.

Sophia, the world-famous humanoid robot developed by Hong Kong-based Hanson Robotics, has generated more than $1 million in sales from her debut NFT drop on Nifty Gateway.

The “Andrea Bonaceto and Sophia the Robot drop” was launched in collaboration with contemporary artist Andrea Bonaceto. The drop included tokenized portrait GIFs that morphed from artist Andre Bonaceto’s paintings into Sophia’s artworks. The portraits depicted figures involved in her development such as Hanson Robotics founder David Hanson and the AI researcher Ben Goertzel, along with self-portraits of Sophia.

The drop consisted of four open editions of 30 copies, for around $2500 to 3000 apiece, and a one-of-one self-portrait which was auctioned for more than $680,000 on March 25.

After the auction, winning bidder and digital artist “888” tweeted “I have goosebumps,” with Sophia responding “Me too, we really had a connection. Your work was very inspiring on so many levels, so I want to hold on to its meaning a little longer. Will share soon.”

Bhad Bhabie’s ‘cash me outside’ meme

Rapper Bhab Bhabie, famous for her antics on the Dr. Phi show, which turned into the viral internet meme “cash me outside”, appears to have realized the artistic significance of non-fungible tokens.

Bhabie is set to release “ETH ME Outside”, a week-long NFT drop across NFT platforms, OpenSea, Rarible, and Zora, starting from today.

The NFT drop will consist of a collection of digital meme iconography surrounding her world-famous “cash me outside” catchphrase, with part of the proceeds going to the non-profit Breaking the Code of Silence, an organization focused on raising awareness for the “troubled teen industry”

Cardano approaches NFT marketplaces

The founder of Cardano, Charles Hoskinson stated on March 25, that he is exploring ways to incorporate NFTs into the Cardano network.

Hoskinson said that he has already approached some of the top-10 NFT marketplaces about porting over to the network from Ethereum:

“It’s easy to clone these protocols; it’s easy to partner with these. Just in NFTs, we approached several of the top-10 marketplaces and already begun discussions porting them over to Cardano. Because, why not? It’s an easy conversation, and it’s just engineering resources.”

Porting over top NFT platforms could provide a notable use case for the network given high gas fees on Ethereum, and coincides with the upcoming rollout of the Alonzo hard fork, an upgrade that will allow smart contracts on the Cardano network.

Royally good personal NFT concert

Prince’s legendary bass player and Grammy award-winning producer, Andrew Gouché, will become the first-ever musician to broadcast a live, virtual and personal NFT concert.

Access to the event “Wakanomy Presents: NFT Live feat. Andrew Gouché” will be auctioned off as an NFT on Open Sea on April 21, with the highest bidder receiving access to the online concert from the comfort of their own homes.

The concert will be performed exclusively for the highest bidder and any guests they chose to choose to view it with.

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The NFT of record: New York Times raises $500,000 for charity in NFT column sale

The NYT goes NFT as tokenized article auctions for over $500,000

"It's worth a try," wrote New York Times columnist Kevin Roose of his attempt to auction one of his articles as a non-fungible token (NFT). Just a day later, however, it appears to be worth much more than that.

After publishing a step-by-step NFT explainer titled "Buy This Column on the Blockchain!" on Wednesday, Roose has successfully auctioned today what he calls a "digital original" of his article as an NFT on the Foundation platform, raising over $550,000 for charity. 

The last half-hour of the auction was a particularly exciting one, with a bidding war breaking out to drive up the price from just under $50,000 to the final $562,891 sale. Competing for the coveted digital clip was Facebook veteran and stealth startup founder J Ouyang and the eventual winner, Dubai-based production company 3F Music

The proceeds of the sale are being donated to the NYT’s The Neediest Cases Fund, which has distributed over $300 million to charities and families over its 110-year history.

The donation to charity makes sense given that — even as many newspaper and media companies shut their doors primarily due to venture capital and hedge fund mismanagement — the NYT is thriving. The company’s earnings report for q4 2020 shows that the company generated $80.5 million in profit on $509.4 million in revenues during the period, with newer verticals like digital subscriptions and podcasts as standout earners.

This successful foray may prompt the 170 year-old newspaper to experiment further with blockchain technology. After all, the hard part is over: on Twitter Roose made playful reference to what was no doubt a lengthy legal process in getting the institution and its various lawyers and gatekeepers to lend the NYT brand to the experiment, saying that it induced “maximum possible confusion.”

When reached for comment, Roose simply said “Wow.” He noted that a follow-up column will be forthcoming, but did not specify if it will also be for sale. 

The sale might be a boon for Roose personally, as well: NYT finance editor Randy Pennell made a crack about how the high price tag indicates that Roose’s per-column rate might deserve a bump:

However, by that metric the Times might want to look elsewhere for new talent. Amid a surge in absurd NFT sale prices, Roose has been solidly beaten by a robot: Hanson Robotic's Sophia sold a painting for over $700,000 at auction

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Nifty News: Italian copyright agency mints 4M NFTs, breast cancer LINK found, and more

Algorand helps secure almost 100,000 authors' copyrights, NFTs raise breast cancer awareness, the New York Times gets in on the action, and more.

Italian copyright collecting agency Società Italiana degli Autori ed Editori, SIAE, has minted more than four million NFTs on the Algorand blockchain to digitally represent the rights of more than 95,000 authors.

The partnership between SIAE and Algorand started in 2019, with SIAE aiming to digitize its entire copyright database to help decentralize the management of the metadata. NFTs will eventually provide copyright owners such as authors and publishers with royalty streams to their work.

The tokenization of the articles and published works will allow the system “to transfer management directly to rights holders, who will then be able to manage directly the metadata relating to their rights,” said general manager of SIAE Gaetano Blandini

“Blockchain technology is definitely an interesting strand to continue exploring because of its transparency and efficiency — by design — features, which are fundamental for those who, like us, manage the salary of other people's hard work."

Chainlink to assign cancer?

Chainlink’s Variable Random Function, or VRF, will play a key role in a new conceptual NFT art experiment Project Mahin in order to raise awareness and funds for breast cancer.

The project will release 60 unique NFTs representing breasts, each of which could be unfortunate enough to “be diagnosed with breast cancer.” The VRF, will randomly assign one in eight of the NFTs cancer, representing the same odds of women who will develop the invasive cancer throughout their lives.

Those illustrations will permanently update at the time to represent a post-operation state, and the secondary sale royalties of the NFT will increase to 15%.

The project was created by artist Armaghan Fatemi and dedicated to her mom and all other women who are currently battling breast cancer:

“We created this project intending to raise awareness for breast cancer, and we are pleased to be able to contribute all royalties to Breast Cancer Now UK.”

A token column by the New York Times

A journalist from the New York Times has written an article explaining NFTs — which he then turned into the very first NFT based on a New York Times article and put it up for auction. “Why can’t a journalist join the NFT party, too?” NYT tech columnist Kevin Roose tweeted in an explainer thread

The NFT is listed for auction on the Foundation marketplace with a current bid of 7 ETH. With 14 hours to go at the time of writing, the item has received bids from a dozen different people including Coin Center’s director of communication Neeraj Agrawal and music producer RAC.

It follows the conclusion of an auction of three Time Magazine covers on the NFT marketplace Superrare. Each cover just sold for between 70 to 88 ETH with a fourth NFT of the three covers together selling for 35 ETH. The listings gained considerable attention from those within the mainstream media, including founder of The Street Jim Cramer.

Artist behind Obama 'Hope' poster auctions NFT

Shepard Fairey, the artist behind former U.S. president Barack Obama’s “Hope” campaign poster, is selling an NFT called “Obey Ideal Power”. The sale goes live on Superrare on March 29, at 1pm EDT.

Fairey intends to use this and other artforms to “raise awareness for the important political and social issues of our time.” He suggests power is not all bad, as it can also be used to benefit and uplift people as well as oppress them. The sale is part of a collaboration between SuperRare and a company called Verisart, which provides ownership certificates for blockchain-based assets.

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Nifty News: Jack Dorsey sells genesis tweet for $2.9M, NFTs save wild pandas and more

Jack Dorsey raised $2.9 million for charity selling a tweet, NFTs are saving wild pandas, and John Cleese has sarcastically cashed in on the tokenization craze.

Jack Dorsey, the CEO of Twitter sold a tokenized representation of his first-ever tweet for more than $2.9 million on Monday.

The tweet was published on March 21, 2006, and reads: 

A two-week bidding war between Bridge Oracle CEO Sina Estavi and tech entrepreneur Justin Sun saw the price move from $500,000 to the final sale of more than $2.9 million, with Sina Estavi winning out with a bid of 1,630 Ether (ETH).

On March 10, Dorsey stated that would immediately convert the proceeds from the sale into Bitcoin (BTC), and donate it all to GiveDirectly, an organization helping those living in poverty in Africa. After the sale concluded the CEO tweeted the transaction.

The auction was held on NFT marketplace “Valuables” and closed on March 22. The NFT platform allows users to buy and sell tokenized Twitter posts and is operated by blockchain-based social media company Cent.

The platform has seen many big names enter the marketplace to sell tweets, such as the NBA, entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuck, the NFL’s Green Bay Packers, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

John Cleese’s “sell you a bridge” joke NFT is going for more than $33,000

Popular British comedian and actor, John Cleese, appears to have joined the NFT gold rush in jest.

On March 20, Cleese published a video to Twitter announcing he would auction his first tokenized collectible on NFT marketplace OpenSea.

Identifying himself as “a young, unknown, digital artist,” Cleese described the emergence of NFTs as a “cultural moment” offering “a bridge from the past to the future.”

Invoking the true-life story of the American con man who fraudulently sold the Brooklyn Bridge to multiple investors (who were later moved on by police after attempting to erect toll booths on the bridge), Cleese offers to sell his followers a one-of-a-kind NFT immortalizing his black and white digital scribble depicting the Brooklyn Bridge for the modest price of $69.3 million dollars.

Despite Cleese’s aggressive price targets, bidding on the token began on March 21 at just $100, with bidding pushing prices above $33,000 as of this writing. The auction is set to finish after 10 more days of bidding.

John Cleese's Brooklyn Bridge, (opensea.io)

In a March 19 interview with Vanity Fair, Cleese remarked of NFTs, “The world has gone terminally insane.”

PixelPanda NFTs used to save wild pandas

A new NFT project “PixelPandas” has announced it will donate 10% of all profits to panda conversation. The project will mint tokens featuring images of pandas for each of the 1,864 pandas that remain in the wild, and then auction the tokens in limited tranches on NFT marketplace OpenSea.

Regular PixelPandas, (opensea.io)

One PixelPanda featuring an 8bit panda in a beanie was purchased on March 19 for 0.01 ETH and has been relisted with an asking price of 1 ETH worth roughly $1,700.

The panda NFTs are categorized by their rarity, with the drops featuring “Regular” pandas, rare “Kung Fu” and “Bamboo” pandas, and an ultra-rare “Albino” panda.

Donations from PixelPandas’ revenues have already funded the adoption of a wild panda through the World Wildlife Fund.

Rico Nasty releases 1 of 1 NFT

Acclaimed rapper Rico Nasty dropped her first tokenized collectible on NFT marketplace SuperRare on March 22.

The one-of-a-kind NFT depicts a looped animation inspired by the music video for her recent single, “OHFR?,” and was made in collaboration with former DreamWorks animator, Don Allen III.

The auction is due to close on March 25, with the current highest bid sitting at 0.1 ETH worth roughly $170.

Nasty’s dive into tokenized art follows other rappers such as Ja Rule, who auctioned off an NFT depicting a painting of the logo from the disastrous “Fyre Festival” he faced charges for after co-founding the event in 2017.

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Actionists reinventing art: As it ever was, so shall it ever be (even in crypto)

Tokenizing art could make paintings a more liquid vehicle for investment, engaging people who don’t have access to the high-end art market.

Art trumps money. Always. It is important to remember this amid the current crypto art hype. Nonfungible tokens have given digital art the benefit of provable ownership, scarcity and programmability, allowing digital creators to promote and sell their work in ways never before possible.

With the blockchain industry growing and markets becoming more liquid, crypto art has seen a flurry of incredible primary market sales. The ICO-like fear of missing out has inspired collectors and artists to chase scarcity, and even destroy art in the process, as was the case with the creation and auction of the Banksy print NFT.

Still, what may seem like a marketing ploy may be one of the greatest actionist performances the art world has seen to date.

Chasing scarcity

The rarer something is, the more it is coveted. That seems to be the basic principle of any collectible items and applies to crypto art as well. A quick look at single vs. multiple-edition sales shows that the market favors uniqueness.

This chase for scarcity has taken on many forms, from limiting the number of editions of a particular art piece to finding “firsts” in a sea of things — as was the case with Jack Dorsey’s tweet.

Major stars from the art world and music industry have started to experiment with NFTs, making six-figure drops a seemingly commonplace occurrence. From Paris Hilton’s $17,000 picture of a cat to Grime’s $389,000 Death of the Old to Beeple’s landmark Christie’s auction, sales and awareness are on the rise.

The allure of mega sales

Despite the incredible primary market sales, the secondary market, for the most part, has been relatively quiet. Looking at data from SuperRare, we can see that secondary market sales counts are a fraction of the number of primary items sold.

The fact that artists’ royalties are dealt with differently on different platforms and rarely function cross-platform further forces both creators and collectors to focus on initial sales for near-term success.

Bridging the gap

The blockchain industry has seen and continues to see many attempts to bridge the physical and digital worlds. With respect to art, the initial attempts were focused on tokenization of physical art and pieces by famous painters, with price tags that made them highly illiquid. The hope was that fractionalizing the expensive pieces through tokenization would lead to greater engagement from people who were previously priced out of the high-end art market. This would make the paintings more liquid investment vehicles.

To this point, the attempts have had very limited success. This may be due in part to the mismatch in audiences: Traditional collectors don’t operate crypto wallets, and digital natives feel less attached to physical items held by a centralized party.

However, what if someone could take a physical art piece and make it digital? The Injective Protocol team has tried to do just that. It acquired a Banksy screenprint “Morons (White),” only to burn the physical artwork (while streaming the event) and minting the image as an NFT.

The seemingly barbaric ritual was supposed to ascend the Banksy screen print to a blockchain and earn the team a tidy sum in the process. The second goal was clearly achieved. The original piece was acquired for $95,000 and auctioned off on OpenSea for around $400,000. However, it can be argued that what happened was a transfer from the physical to the digital world.

Rather, the Injective Protocol team destroyed a Banksy screenprint and created an entirely different work of art.

Vandals or actionists?

It is easy to write off the burning of the Banksy NFT as a successful marketing ploy, but on closer inspection, there is so much more there.

On the surface, there is a tip of the hat to the original artist, who himself has destroyed his own piece at an auction for the sake of creating new art. However, that is just the beginning.

Consider that art has a rich tradition of actionist events where an art installation was damaged for the sake of a statement, effectively creating a new piece of art. The most comparable example is probably that of Alexander Brener, who painted a green dollar sign on Kazimir Malevich’s white cross at a museum exhibition.

Brener was making a statement against “corruption and commercialism in the art world.” Now look closer at the Banksy screenprint and read what it says: “I can’t believe you morons actually buy this shit.” That cannot be an accident.

At a time when a Beeple work sold for $6.6 million, while a Vincent van Gogh (albeit a disputed van Gogh) went for $650,000, the Injective Protocol team made a statement by burning this particular Banksy piece and selling the NFT, which no longer represents a physical artwork but the memory of that artwork, at an auction.

To top it all off, the team streamed the burning of the piece... in true performance art fashion.

Did the market miss the point?

While the market has been debating whether the merits of the destruction of art, the nature of scarcity and the price mechanics of crypto art, the Injective Protocol team may have pulled off one of the most spectacular actionist art statements in history.

This was a performance art piece, a vandalistic ritual and an ironic auction all in one.

The market may be chasing scarcity for the sake of scarcity, without even pausing to consider what just happened. It may even be that the Injective Protocol team did not intend for all of the hidden meanings to be there. However, that is the power of art.

Years from now, after the FOMOs and FUDs settle their scores, we will be looking at this not as another six-figure NFT auction, but as perhaps the first instance of actionist art in the crypto space.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Ilya Abugov is an experienced analyst with a background in equity analytics, international management consulting and IT. He incorporates his traditional industry experience in his approach to data analysis and project evaluation. Ilya is the former head of research at Crypto Briefing and is an advisor at DappRadar. He is especially interested in the DeFi, art and collectibles sectors of the crypto industry.

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Painting by avant-garde master Baranoff-Rossine to be auctioned as a NFT

Mintable will be hosting the high-priced auction alongside more approachable pieces

An early 20th century master who boasts a permanent installation at the Museum of Modern Art is about to get new life on the blockchain. 

In collaboration with NFT marketplace Mintable, the family of Wladimir Baranoff-Rossine will be releasing a collection of the esteemed Cubo-Futurist’s work. There will be a number of paintings digitized as 1000-print drops, three digitized NFT piece auctions, and one hybrid NFT/physical painting auction set to send the highest bidder both a physical Baranoff-Rossine original painting as well as an NFT image of the work.

On crypto market data provider Brave New Coin’s podcast, NFT marketplace Mintable CEO Zack Burks noted that the forthcoming auction may be the highest-profile example of tokenizing a physical, fine art painting.

“This is historic, we’ve never had something like this in the NFT ecosystem before,” said Burks. “NFTs have been around for three years now, at least on Ethereum, and there’s never been a piece of fine art tokenized. It’s always been something we’ve discussed in the NFT ecosystem, but it’s never actually been accomplished, and especially not from someone who holds such a legacy as Wladimir Baranoff-Rossine.”

Baranoff-Rossine’s grandson, also named Wladimir, said that the physical art/blockchain mashup fits well with the Russian’s legacy. Baranoff-Rossine was an inventor as well as a sculptor and painter, and was known for avant-garde experiments and pieces that fused sound, color, and technology, such as the “octophonic piano”.

Burks and Baranoff-Rossine’s grandson noted that Mintable is expecting interest from fine art collectors, newly-rich Ethereum whales, and casual collectors all. However, given the absurd $69 million price Beeple’s “Everydays: The First 5000 Days” recently fetched at Christie’s auction house, Burks believes the bidding will come down to a war between a NFT collector and a fine art collector, given how the mashup can appeal to both worlds:

“For me, obviously, I run a NFT marketplace, I like NFTs I collect NFTs, and when I see this, I wanna buy it. I want to hang this on my wall, I want to have a piece of historic art in my house, AND have the NFT. That’s the beauty behind this drop.”

Critics turned collectors

Many in the art world have been fussy about crypto’s recent incursion, grumbling that the work digital and NFT artists have put forth is childish or otherwise beneath their attention. It’s a response that has significant historical parallels, including with Baranoff-Rossine: while critics and the press were dubious about his work at the time, one of his sculptures is now part of the permanent collection at the MoMA. 

When asked if Baranoff-Rossine would be participating in the current NFT art revolution were he alive today, his grandson responded enthusiastically in the affirmative.

“Absolutely. It’s something which he did his whole career, so yes absolutely, I think that’s what’s exciting about blockchain,” he said. “The other thing as well is, as an artist, the most important thing you want people to see you work, whether you’re dead or alive, so the whole art scene in blockchain technology and the NFT space is just bringing a lot more eyes to the collection.”

The drop will feature a variety of pieces with different price ranges. The primary auction will be the physical painting tied to the NFT (the winner will have the painting mailed to them), as well as three other auctions for digitalized works, and six “open editions” — 1,000 fixed-price digitized pieces.

Other experiments, such as a burnt Banksy artwork that was reanimated on-chain as a NFT, have involved destroying the physical piece or finding ways to tie the physical and digital works together, such as with a microchip. However, Burks believes that simply creating the NFT loosely associated with the physical piece yields benefits in terms of reduction in paperwork and provenance bookkeeping.

Hybrid physical work and NFT releases also seem to be on the rise: last week, Cointelegraph was first to report that legendary British artist Damien Hirst would be releasing a NFT project titled “The Currency.”

It appears that the people criticizing the new technology will be the ones collecting it soon enough.

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