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Metaverse Imaginaries - Tokenomics: A New Economy of Art

  • 26 January 2022, 6-7:30pm
  • Online event

View the recording of the event below

This conversation, chaired by artist Simon Denny, explored what the emerging political, creative, and economic imaginaries of the metaverse – both utopian and dystopian - tell us about the future of making, owning, and selling art.

We delved into the concept of the metaverse - the internet’s possible successor, a virtual world (or worlds) layered onto the physical through the use of immersive technologies, populated by avatars and synthetic life forms and underpinned by blockchain technology. In doing so, we examined how the technologies of the metaverse are enabling creatives to reimagine the dynamics of art making.

Leading creators including artists and worldbuilders Keiken, New Art City, and Arif Khan, each took us on a journey through their imaginaries for the metaverse. The session viewed questions about what creative expression, economic agency, ownership, authorship, and collaboration look like in the age of NFTs, collectively owned avatars, virtual collectibles, and mixed reality worlds.

The answers to these questions may ultimately be defined by who builds and owns the metaverse (or metaverses) and the degree to which freedom and privacy are safeguarded within it.

Will the expressive potential and tech infrastructure of the metaverse enable creators to thrive - both creatively and economically? How will value be attributed to art “on-chain” and “off-chain” and can the totalising tendencies inherent in the technology be avoided?

Curated by Lucy Rose Sollitt

OTHER EVENTS IN THE SERIES


About the speakers

Blockchain is changing how art is made, sold and financed, where it circulates and who its custodians are. But can it really increase the creative and economic agency of artists?

The explosion in popularity of NFTs over the past year marks a moment of radical transformation within the art market.

For better or worse, blockchain technology is ushering in new imaginaries and is rapidly evolving alternative sales, funding and ownership mechanisms which could rewrite the rules of the traditional art world.

What are the implications of blockchain tokenomics for how art is created, sold and financed, where art circulates and who its custodians are? Will the next generation of NFT’s and DAO’s increase creative and economic agency? And if so, how can this be shared more equitably between individual creators, their collaborators and supporters?

Curated by Lucy Rose Sollitt, Tokenomics: A New Economy of Art, brings together pioneering artists and technologists, to discuss the concerns and to highlight and support thoughtful approaches which use the full potential of the technology to imagine fairer ecosystems of art making.

The series will address the defining questions of this new era with the aim of helping artists and those working across the art market to navigate the opportunities and complexities that lie ahead.

About the series

Blockchain is changing how art is made, sold and financed, where it circulates and who its custodians are. But can it really increase the creative and economic agency of artists?

The explosion in popularity of NFTs over the past year marks a moment of radical transformation within the art market.

For better or worse, blockchain technology is ushering in new imaginaries and is rapidly evolving alternative sales, funding and ownership mechanisms which could rewrite the rules of the traditional art world.

What are the implications of blockchain tokenomics for how art is created, sold and financed, where art circulates and who its custodians are? Will the next generation of NFTs and DAO’s increase creative and economic agency? And if so, how can this be shared more equitably between individual creators, their collaborators and supporters?

Curated by Lucy Rose Sollitt, Tokenomics: A New Economy of Art, brought together pioneering artists and technologists, to discuss the concerns and to highlight and support thoughtful approaches that use the full potential of the technology to imagine fairer ecosystems of art making.

The series addressed the defining questions of this new era to help artists and those working across the art market to navigate the opportunities and complexities that lie ahead.

View the recordings of the other events in the series below

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