artylang
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December 2010
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Cecily Brown edition, by artylang on Dec 24, 2023 17:59:17 GMT 1, bump
bump
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artylang
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December 2010
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Sam Moyer Canvas FS, by artylang on Dec 24, 2023 17:58:55 GMT 1, bump
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artylang
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December 2010
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Wolfgang Tillmans signed editions, by artylang on Dec 24, 2023 17:58:27 GMT 1, bump
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artylang
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December 2010
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Charles Gaines edition, by artylang on Dec 24, 2023 17:58:09 GMT 1, bump
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artylang
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Wade Guyton X edition , by artylang on Dec 24, 2023 17:57:45 GMT 1, bump
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artylang
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December 2010
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Jose Parla ๐บ๐ธ New Paintings โข Exhibition News โข For Sale, by artylang on Oct 18, 2023 17:26:05 GMT 1, just a heads up. I am almost sure these are not signed.
just a heads up. I am almost sure these are not signed.
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artylang
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December 2010
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Cecily Brown edition, by artylang on Oct 14, 2023 15:46:02 GMT 1, back up for sale due to time wasters.
upload image to internet
Cecily Brown, "The Last Shipwreck", 2018
Ditone print
52โรโ50 cm
edition: 100โ+โ20 A.P.โ+โ2 P.P.
Numbered and signed on the back
$4000
back up for sale due to time wasters. upload image to internetCecily Brown, "The Last Shipwreck", 2018 Ditone print 52โรโ50 cm edition: 100โ+โ20 A.P.โ+โ2 P.P. Numbered and signed on the back $4000
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artylang
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December 2010
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DAVOOD ROOSTAEI Original Canvas For Sale, by artylang on Oct 8, 2023 0:04:57 GMT 1, im sorry but is that ali with will smith? Are you asking 95k for that absolute dog shit? Seen some horrible stuff on this site in the 17 years Ive been a member but this, this is easily far and away the worst. Congrats!
im sorry but is that ali with will smith? Are you asking 95k for that absolute dog shit? Seen some horrible stuff on this site in the 17 years Ive been a member but this, this is easily far and away the worst. Congrats!
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artylang
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gone
Sept 22, 2023 15:28:50 GMT 1
gone, by artylang on Sept 22, 2023 15:28:50 GMT 1, bump
bump
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artylang
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gone
Jul 8, 2023 16:53:53 GMT 1
gone, by artylang on Jul 8, 2023 16:53:53 GMT 1, thanks
thanks
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artylang
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December 2010
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Charles Gaines edition, by artylang on Jul 8, 2023 16:49:38 GMT 1,
Charles Gaines
Numbers and Trees: Project 1 Edition
2016
Digital pigment print, on wove paper, with full margins.
Image. 20 x 16 in. (50.8 x 40.6 cm)
paper. 21 x 17 in. (53.3 x 43.2 cm) signed and numbered edition of 150
last sale I can find www.phillips.com/detail/charles-gaines/NY030122/339
please dm offers thank you
Charles Gaines Numbers and Trees: Project 1 Edition 2016 Digital pigment print, on wove paper, with full margins. Image. 20 x 16 in. (50.8 x 40.6 cm) paper. 21 x 17 in. (53.3 x 43.2 cm) signed and numbered edition of 150 last sale I can find www.phillips.com/detail/charles-gaines/NY030122/339please dm offers thank you
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artylang
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December 2010
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Yoshitomo Nara ๐ฏ๐ต New Print Release โข Contemporary Art , by artylang on Jul 8, 2023 16:45:34 GMT 1, Taking offers
thank you
Taking offers
thank you
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artylang
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December 2010
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Whisbe - Vandal (gigantic), by artylang on Apr 19, 2023 18:43:12 GMT 1, didnt he just quit nfts because he drained out what he could? The nifty gateway cemetery might be bigger than the simchowitz one
didnt he just quit nfts because he drained out what he could? The nifty gateway cemetery might be bigger than the simchowitz one
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artylang
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December 2010
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Sam Moyer Canvas FS, by artylang on Nov 1, 2022 18:13:10 GMT 1, Let us send this to the top with a bumpity bump bump. Ya heard? Yes?
Let us send this to the top with a bumpity bump bump. Ya heard? Yes?
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artylang
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December 2010
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Ben Eine FREE SIGNED print, by artylang on Mar 26, 2022 18:24:43 GMT 1, Plenty of artists deserve your money before giving it to dudes that hurt those who are weaker than them. Well the print was free so haven't given him any money. Also I don't think you can just put people into categories of "good" and "bad". Humans are complicated, we all have our moments. I'm certainly in favor of giving people a chance of rehabilitation rather than writing them off completely sure but dont expect my patronage after you hit a woman in the face in public.
Plenty of artists deserve your money before giving it to dudes that hurt those who are weaker than them. Well the print was free so haven't given him any money. Also I don't think you can just put people into categories of "good" and "bad". Humans are complicated, we all have our moments. I'm certainly in favor of giving people a chance of rehabilitation rather than writing them off completely sure but dont expect my patronage after you hit a woman in the face in public.
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artylang
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December 2010
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Ben Eine FREE SIGNED print, by artylang on Mar 26, 2022 17:24:47 GMT 1, Plenty of artists deserve your money before giving it to dudes that hurt those who are weaker than them.
Plenty of artists deserve your money before giving it to dudes that hurt those who are weaker than them.
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artylang
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December 2010
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Why art NFTs are a bad investment, by artylang on Jan 7, 2022 16:36:16 GMT 1, youre overthinking it. In the case of artists who use or incorporate smart contracts as an artform, it's just another medium. It can also be a means of distributing digital art. Really isnt much more to it. What people are willing to pay seems as irrelevant as discussing the price of paint and canvas. Markets find their equilibrium over time. Back in 2006-8 people on here paid much higher prices for artists no one talks about anymore. Diving into digital art has been the most enjoyable and exciting art experience since discovering banksy in 2005-6.
of course there are loads more use cases.
youre overthinking it. In the case of artists who use or incorporate smart contracts as an artform, it's just another medium. It can also be a means of distributing digital art. Really isnt much more to it. What people are willing to pay seems as irrelevant as discussing the price of paint and canvas. Markets find their equilibrium over time. Back in 2006-8 people on here paid much higher prices for artists no one talks about anymore. Diving into digital art has been the most enjoyable and exciting art experience since discovering banksy in 2005-6.
of course there are loads more use cases.
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artylang
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December 2010
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WTB KAWS / Damien Hirst / Murakami / Kusama / Futura, by artylang on Jan 1, 2022 21:49:47 GMT 1, you can buy stuff that doesn't belong in a souvenir shop with your budget, do better
you can buy stuff that doesn't belong in a souvenir shop with your budget, do better
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artylang
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December 2010
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Edgar Plans ๐ช๐ธ Sculpture โข Madrid โข NBA Basketball , by artylang on Dec 30, 2021 14:53:26 GMT 1, wow this is a cash grab piece of garbage. time to vacuum up some eth off my fans
wow this is a cash grab piece of garbage. time to vacuum up some eth off my fans
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artylang
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December 2010
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NFT Art
Dec 29, 2021 15:13:58 GMT 1
NFT Art , by artylang on Dec 29, 2021 15:13:58 GMT 1,
Usually always agree with Brad. While I think he makes a lot of good points (there is a ton of shit in the nft space), he fails to highlight any of the real use cases. He also negates all the artists that have been able to support themselves through their work since discovering nfts as a method of distribution.
Usually always agree with Brad. While I think he makes a lot of good points (there is a ton of shit in the nft space), he fails to highlight any of the real use cases. He also negates all the artists that have been able to support themselves through their work since discovering nfts as a method of distribution.
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artylang
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December 2010
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NFT Art
Dec 29, 2021 15:10:47 GMT 1
NFT Art , by artylang on Dec 29, 2021 15:10:47 GMT 1, Iโd say the latest South Park episode also does a fantastic job of breaking down NFTs for the layman Brian Eno's take:
"Iโve been approached several times to โmake an NFTโ. So far nothing has convinced me that there is anything worth making in that arena.
โWorth makingโ for me implies bringing something into existence that adds value to the world, not just to a bank account. If I had primarily wanted to make money I would have had a different career as a different kind of person. I probably wouldnโt have chosen to be an artist.
NFTs seem to me just a way for artists to get a little piece of the action from global capitalism, our own cute little version of financialisation. How sweet โ now artists can become little capitalist assholes as well."
Thats funny, I dont remember Brian Eno ever giving away his art for free. What a rich old boomer take
Iโd say the latest South Park episode also does a fantastic job of breaking down NFTs for the layman Brian Eno's take:
"Iโve been approached several times to โmake an NFTโ. So far nothing has convinced me that there is anything worth making in that arena.
โWorth makingโ for me implies bringing something into existence that adds value to the world, not just to a bank account. If I had primarily wanted to make money I would have had a different career as a different kind of person. I probably wouldnโt have chosen to be an artist.
NFTs seem to me just a way for artists to get a little piece of the action from global capitalism, our own cute little version of financialisation. How sweet โ now artists can become little capitalist assholes as well."
Thats funny, I dont remember Brian Eno ever giving away his art for free. What a rich old boomer take
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artylang
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December 2010
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Michael Kagan ๐บ๐ธ Helmeted Astronaut Paintings โข Brooklyn, by artylang on Dec 5, 2021 16:44:35 GMT 1, who is buying this crap
who is buying this crap
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artylang
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December 2010
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Lucien Smith Seeds , by artylang on Nov 25, 2021 22:55:17 GMT 1, seems pretty low effort if you ask me
seems pretty low effort if you ask me
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artylang
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December 2010
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NFT Art , by artylang on Nov 22, 2021 0:29:44 GMT 1, theportal.to/Love the look of this, demo is great too. I've moved to Sol projects, eth is way too much in terms of gas. Can you see others losing interest in ETH based stuff too and looking for more efficient projects? cant imagine buying anything on sol before tezos.
theportal.to/Love the look of this, demo is great too. I've moved to Sol projects, eth is way too much in terms of gas. Can you see others losing interest in ETH based stuff too and looking for more efficient projects? cant imagine buying anything on sol before tezos.
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artylang
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December 2010
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NFT Art
Nov 19, 2021 20:25:13 GMT 1
NFT Art , by artylang on Nov 19, 2021 20:25:13 GMT 1, Pretty sure that it's the other way around. Only 1500 minted so far. Correct, the number shown on the site is the number remaining. I think they really rushed the release and the sales definitely back that up. It's a shame too because I really like the project. Might buy in eventually still. The problem that I have with NFTs is that if a project tanks you're really not left with much. If I buy a piece of physical art and the value tanks, at least I still have a piece of physical art. NFTs feel far more like gambling than collecting right now. Maybe that'll change when there are easy, cheap ways to display your NFT collection at home. hdmi a laptop into your tv or screen share from a device. I change my screen up with new art everyday. The amazing thing about nft's is you dont even have to own the piece to view it in the same resolution as the owner. If you dont feel like youd want to see it in your home, just like physical art, maybe it should be a pass.
Pretty sure that it's the other way around. Only 1500 minted so far. Correct, the number shown on the site is the number remaining. I think they really rushed the release and the sales definitely back that up. It's a shame too because I really like the project. Might buy in eventually still. The problem that I have with NFTs is that if a project tanks you're really not left with much. If I buy a piece of physical art and the value tanks, at least I still have a piece of physical art. NFTs feel far more like gambling than collecting right now. Maybe that'll change when there are easy, cheap ways to display your NFT collection at home. hdmi a laptop into your tv or screen share from a device. I change my screen up with new art everyday. The amazing thing about nft's is you dont even have to own the piece to view it in the same resolution as the owner. If you dont feel like youd want to see it in your home, just like physical art, maybe it should be a pass.
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artylang
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December 2010
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Tauba Auerbach etchings , by artylang on Nov 17, 2021 23:14:11 GMT 1, bump
bump
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artylang
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December 2010
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NFT Art
Nov 11, 2021 15:42:49 GMT 1
via mobile
NFT Art , by artylang on Nov 11, 2021 15:42:49 GMT 1, I know it's not the usual question to ask when taking about NFTs, but what device do people use to view the ones they own ?
Ideal set up with today's tech is a Mac mini m1 taped to the back of a really good TV. Some of the more hardware heavy generative art like solvency.art will need a bit more to run properly.
I know it's not the usual question to ask when taking about NFTs, but what device do people use to view the ones they own ? Ideal set up with today's tech is a Mac mini m1 taped to the back of a really good TV. Some of the more hardware heavy generative art like solvency.art will need a bit more to run properly.
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artylang
New Member
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December 2010
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NFT Art
Nov 10, 2021 23:44:04 GMT 1
NFT Art , by artylang on Nov 10, 2021 23:44:04 GMT 1, fwiw i dont think id ever buy another physical piece of art again. So different strokes. People said the same things about stencil art...
fwiw i dont think id ever buy another physical piece of art again. So different strokes. People said the same things about stencil art...
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artylang
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December 2010
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NFT Art , by artylang on Nov 4, 2021 17:04:12 GMT 1, Besides John's work my other focus is on generative art. Art that is created using an algorithm written by an artist in code. A lot of it is shit, too. Just rehashed canonized minimalism made with code instead of a brush. That said, there is gold in them there hills, too. A few of my favorites are: Casey Reas: co-created processing. A programming language that nearly every artist that works in code uses today to make work Alexis Andre: His project 720 minutes on the Artblocks platform to me is one of the more interesting applications for a generative nft. He wrote an algorithm to create 720 unique clocks. One for each minute in a 12 hour cycle. Each "clock" is given a designated minute where for 60 seconds the owner is presented with a light show. My wife and I use it as a moment to connect. As someone who loves time as a theme in art, this ticks all the boxes for me. Aesthetic beauty and conceptual depth. www.artblocks.io/project/27Frederick Vanhoutte: Creates futuristic cityscapes using custom made software and algorithms. His work is instantly recognizable as his own and even with his job as a physics phd working in a hospital specializing in radiation he is pushing his practice on nearly a daily basis. objkt.com/profile/tz1TSWEDs9wcBx2KiRzVzyzECsNpRiZaLJ1D/creations?page=8these are massive images and really benefit from zooming in. This is just the tip of the ice berg. Algorithmically generated art is really interesting to me. I never believed this would be me, but here we are. I put a new work on my kitchen tv everyday like a rotating canvas. After almost a year in this space I cant see myself buying physical art ever again. Thanks for the suggestions. How do you display it? At one point I was thinking of getting that Samsung Frame TV, but the reviews for the quality of the tv itself weren't very good. Do they have good digital frames these days for displaying this stuff? I am not a hardware expert at all. We have a ~40" led tv in our kitchen and i hdmi my laptop into it. Once apple puts the new m1x in the mini, Ill get one of those and tape it to the back of the tv. My current set up cant handle some of the more demanding generative artworks. For ex Solvency by, Ezra Miller. You need like a 16gig video card minimum to view. So the tech to view is still catching up to the work these guys are producing. This project is a set of 500 algorithmically generated works that basically function as never ending and never repeating living digital paintings. They live on chain, so no data needs to be stored on your computer, which is another aspect of some of the most interesting generative art. All the code required to compile the work lives on-chain. As long as ethereum survives the art can always be reconstructed. www.solvency.art/ these are amazing full screen if your computer can handle it or projected on a wall.
I really feel like we are living through a special time. A lot like how a lot of us felt street art was going to change the world back in 2006. It feels like a moment of peaking creativity and possibility, all hype and money aside. Im watching artists get PAID. Im seeing artists in third world areas get PAID and feed their families or more. I see this everyday in this space. Everyday in this space entire communities of thousands of people wish each other good morning and post the rally cry of crypto/nft WAGMI (we're all gonna make it). Theres something about that, that's really attractive to me. In a cold, shitty world where there isnt much to be hopeful about, it feels like there is something special here.
Besides John's work my other focus is on generative art. Art that is created using an algorithm written by an artist in code. A lot of it is shit, too. Just rehashed canonized minimalism made with code instead of a brush. That said, there is gold in them there hills, too. A few of my favorites are: Casey Reas: co-created processing. A programming language that nearly every artist that works in code uses today to make work Alexis Andre: His project 720 minutes on the Artblocks platform to me is one of the more interesting applications for a generative nft. He wrote an algorithm to create 720 unique clocks. One for each minute in a 12 hour cycle. Each "clock" is given a designated minute where for 60 seconds the owner is presented with a light show. My wife and I use it as a moment to connect. As someone who loves time as a theme in art, this ticks all the boxes for me. Aesthetic beauty and conceptual depth. www.artblocks.io/project/27Frederick Vanhoutte: Creates futuristic cityscapes using custom made software and algorithms. His work is instantly recognizable as his own and even with his job as a physics phd working in a hospital specializing in radiation he is pushing his practice on nearly a daily basis. objkt.com/profile/tz1TSWEDs9wcBx2KiRzVzyzECsNpRiZaLJ1D/creations?page=8these are massive images and really benefit from zooming in. This is just the tip of the ice berg. Algorithmically generated art is really interesting to me. I never believed this would be me, but here we are. I put a new work on my kitchen tv everyday like a rotating canvas. After almost a year in this space I cant see myself buying physical art ever again. Thanks for the suggestions. How do you display it? At one point I was thinking of getting that Samsung Frame TV, but the reviews for the quality of the tv itself weren't very good. Do they have good digital frames these days for displaying this stuff? I am not a hardware expert at all. We have a ~40" led tv in our kitchen and i hdmi my laptop into it. Once apple puts the new m1x in the mini, Ill get one of those and tape it to the back of the tv. My current set up cant handle some of the more demanding generative artworks. For ex Solvency by, Ezra Miller. You need like a 16gig video card minimum to view. So the tech to view is still catching up to the work these guys are producing. This project is a set of 500 algorithmically generated works that basically function as never ending and never repeating living digital paintings. They live on chain, so no data needs to be stored on your computer, which is another aspect of some of the most interesting generative art. All the code required to compile the work lives on-chain. As long as ethereum survives the art can always be reconstructed. www.solvency.art/ these are amazing full screen if your computer can handle it or projected on a wall. I really feel like we are living through a special time. A lot like how a lot of us felt street art was going to change the world back in 2006. It feels like a moment of peaking creativity and possibility, all hype and money aside. Im watching artists get PAID. Im seeing artists in third world areas get PAID and feed their families or more. I see this everyday in this space. Everyday in this space entire communities of thousands of people wish each other good morning and post the rally cry of crypto/nft WAGMI (we're all gonna make it). Theres something about that, that's really attractive to me. In a cold, shitty world where there isnt much to be hopeful about, it feels like there is something special here.
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