Superficially, the worlds of cryptocurrency and art may seem light-years apart.<\/strong><\/p>\n Certainly, many aficionados of one of these worlds might well profess cheerful ignorance of the other \u2014 which they are happy to maintain. But on closer examination, each might find the other more interesting than they expected.<\/span><\/p>\n After all, both artists and crypto fanatics love the ongoing dynamic tension between the transparent sharing of creativity and the authenticity of trustless provenance. On both sides are creators, collectors and hodlers.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n And whether taking inspiration from the concepts of cryptocurrency as creative elements, using blockchains to track and validate creative pieces directly, or even using the technology itself to fashion entirely new art forms (as we will see later this week), the intersection of these universes spawns fascinating collaborations and connections as movements and fashions emerge within the growing crypto art space.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n To help me navigate this curious new crypto art world, I spoke to Sparrow Read, who runs <\/span>BlackBox Art <\/span><\/a>\u2014<\/span> a place to \u029eu\u0131\u0265\u0287un everything, as she puts it, and where she curates resources for artists and global marketplaces.<\/span><\/p>\n While impressionism emerged in France, and Warhol\u2019s New York Factory locations are recognized as the culmination of the pop art scene, she explained that crypto art as a movement has no geographical point of focus.<\/span><\/p>\n Instead, it brings people together digitally, giving them the opportunity to create and share their artworks online and exchange value in different ways. For her, the existence of the blockchain has brought new unique value to digital artwork in the form of nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, using smart contracts to confirm ownership:<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cPeople had gotten used to digital art just being free. Right click, download, and you\u2019ve got that image. There was no good way of verifying digital ownership. So that\u2019s what smart contracts do, they associate that unique token with that image on in a one-to-one relationship, so you can have a single owner of a piece of digital art.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n And people are ready to pay. Just as they were ready to pay for digital music, books and movies \u2014 because the quality and integrity are superior when you own something verifiably and authentically. And humans revel in uniqueness and possession. In the same way that people spend fiat currency on accumulating value baseball cards, classic Mustangs, and even in gaming assets and tokens, there is a unique and niche marketplace for digital artists to sell and track their work using Ethereum-based tokens.<\/span><\/p>\n This use of smart contracts can support as broad a definition of “art” as you wish to use, embracing CryptoKitties and CryptoPunks, digital pieces, dynamic works and even physical items like the weird <\/span>Plantoid<\/span><\/a> robotic creations sustained by a subscription model through smart contracts.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cI\u2019m not going to tell anybody what art is, that\u2019s up to them to decide,\u201d Read declared.<\/span><\/p>\n Of course, there are other people who are inspired by the concepts of crypto itself, creating art based on currency icons, and the visualization of blocks and chains, as well as more abstract interpretations of concepts like decentralization, transparency and money \u2014 themes that are always open to interpretation after all. And sometimes, artists specifically intend to introduce these concepts to new audiences that wouldn\u2019t typically seek them out.<\/span><\/p>\n Art has often told a story and endeavored to reflect the culture and reality in which it finds itself.<\/span><\/p>\n In this, I speak from experience: my novel Beyond The Chain<\/em> relates some basic lessons about Bitcoin trustlessness and transaction types, in the cunning guise of a psychological thriller.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Wladimir and Holly Hylton from <\/span>BitArt Productions<\/span><\/a> are bringing lessons in blockchain and emergent technology to new audiences in Europe via performance art to raise awareness of the social impact of technology and its potential to bring about change.<\/span><\/p>\n Their production \u201cLet\u2019s Think A BIT\u201d focused on the abstract philosophies of blockchains. \u201cWe use sign language and creative storytelling and dance. And even at one point, we brought in a beat boxer to kind of do a rap about how we stick everything into categories,\u201d Holly explained.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Avoiding the black and white, true\/false dichotomies of contemporary thinking, they formulated and presented a vision of blockchain as a third way, a gray space of transparent truth that can help humanity solve its most huge and pressing problems.<\/span><\/p>\n Next from BitArt is a piece about supply chain and counterfeiting, again relating to the potential of blockchain as an oracle of fact at a time when there is so much global complexity in the way products and materials move around that atrocities are hidden in plain sight: \u201cThere’s so much modern day slavery still embedded in all of that, and the blockchain can really shine a spotlight on all of those injustices and make things function better, all along the way,\u201d Hylton continued.<\/span><\/p>\n It might not sound like an entertaining theme, but she concluded, \u201cWhat\u2019s wrong with having fun while you’re learning and inspiring someone to see something in a completely new way? There’s a bit of magic in theater. And we can use technological tricks to show people [new ways of looking at things] \u2014 you thought about it two minutes ago in this way, but now you see it completely differently.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n\n\t\t<\/div>\n\t<\/div>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div> Art has a history of disruption and pushing boundaries too, something crypto people will relate to intuitively. Even fine artists are succumbing to crypto temptation.<\/span><\/p>\n United Kingdom-based artist Trevor Jones has incorporated QR codes and augmented reality into oil paintings. His artist\u2019s statement reflects the blending of old and new: <\/span>\u201cWe’re amid a digital revolution and so my aim is to investigate how various technologies can be incorporated with my work to enhance or alter the viewer experience. Over the last few years the themes informing my work have become more and more intertwined with my interests in tech and modern communication.\u201d<\/span><\/i><\/p>\nWhere collaboration gives rise to creativity<\/b><\/h4>\n
Digital art discovers scarcity<\/b><\/h4>\n
Digital art takes form<\/b><\/h4>\n
Crypto art and community<\/b><\/h4>\n