History - Fear about NFTs? - MICHELE PETRELLI | Contemporary Artworks

History - Fear about NFTs?

History - Fear about NFTs?

Premise: there are many people who are influenced by the judgment of others. And I notice this when they ask questions about this topic and it rains down avalanches of negative judgments from those who have tried this route and failed, or from those who simply repeat what they have heard from others.

Some years ago a system was invented to make digital art non-reproducible and therefore original. The artist would issue a contract that would merge inextricably with the artwork, and this chain even kept track of future collectors and future sales, and royalties were distributed automatically and without error. And the extraoridinary thing was that all this was visible to everyone. The philosophical problem that arose was about the speculation that led many non-artists to get enormously rich with little monkey drawings. As if that were not enough, those platforms were born that promised you to make money with Artificial Intelligence: glossy images in profusion, shot at very high prices with really shady money spins.
For the umpteenth time an idea that started out good, after careful studies by the usual profiteers, has come under serious attack. But if you think about it, even in the traditional art market there have always been those who only aimed to make money.
I personally don't think that an exchange technology can ruin an artistic work, assuming that there is an artistic work. And we determine that with our years of dedication, with our history.

Upon close examination of digital collectibles, it becomes clear that they are the exact equivalent of signed limited edition prints and are equivalent to an original painting if it is a unique 1/1 edition.
Buying digital art as a unique piece is possible. One way is to have the artist issue a certificate when selling the file; the other, is to sell it as NFT, where the collector's name appears forever as the owner. In the future, the same mode of sale can be used for any other object. The contract written on the blockchain cannot be changed. If the new collector decides to resell that work, there will be a new contract, but he will always appear to anyone who wants to look at the record of that work, as one of the previous buyers. The currency of exchange is ethereum but in some platforms such as Makersplace you can also buy with regular dollars. One then becomes a collector of digital works. @Blue11art, BitcoinBarry1 and @Comfydevil are three of my most devoted collectors. They boast a really huge collection of digital artwork. Many people say, what to do with an NFT if you can't hang it on the wall? The answers are various: you can always make a print in consultation with the artist. Or you can display the work on special LED panels. There are large ones. The advantage of these panels is that you can also display several NFTs in a cyclic way for example. The future is digital. But it is still human and not machines (NO AI).

PS: To my artists friends. All those who contact you privately asking to be able to buy NFT from you, through their sites, not yours.... Unfortunately, where there are exchanges there are also scammers. Block them mercilessly.

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