London Daily

Focus on the big picture.

Investors target booming digital art market despite ‘heist’ fears

Investors target booming digital art market despite ‘heist’ fears

Last month much of the traditional art world had not heard of Mike Winkelmann. Then the digital artist sold a piece that only exists online for £50 million at a Christie’s auction. Beeple, as he is professionally known, is now the third most expensive living artist in terms of auction prices, after Jeff Koons and David Hockney.
The sale of Winkelmann’s computerised collage of 5,000 images — which include a pregnant cyborg Michael Jackson and a Buzz Lightyear with breasts — has catapulted the digital art scene into the spotlight.

It was made possible by new blockchain-based technology called “non-fungible tokens”, or NFTs, which are certificates of authenticity stored on digital ledgers to prove ownership.

Minting art that has no physical presence but can fetch millions at auction is now “no harder than uploading a video to YouTube,” Winkelmann, 39, said. A surge in demand has led to platforms with marketplaces for such works attracting billionaire investors, celebrity endorsements and attention from artists such as Damien Hirst.

Beaumont Nathan, a leading British art advisory firm, estimates that at least $400 million in digital art has changed hands in the past 18 months, about half of those sales since Christmas.

NFT Investments, an investment vehicle for digital art that is planning a £25 million London float, cited estimates in a trading statement that NFT sales across the industry amount to more than $500 million to date, with $240 million taking place in March.

That figure will grow tenfold in the next year, experts at Hiscox predict. The insurer, which specialises in art, says there has been a “huge growth market in cyber insurance” in the past five years. Aon, another big insurance company, said it was dealing with a “growing number” of art clients who were “developing into the digital space”.

The boom is puzzling many observers in the art world due to the unconventional style of the pieces selling for eye-watering sums, which often have dystopian themes. It has also raised concerns about hacking, money laundering and the security of digital assets.

When the hammer went down last month on the work by Winkelmann called Everydays: The First 5000 Days, it marked the first collision of the traditional and digital scenes, after the auction house Christie’s was persuaded to test the waters of NFTs. Sotheby’s followed suit the following week, announcing an auction deal with another popular digital artist called Pak.This acceptance from art institutions has been hailed as evidence that the crypto world is becoming mainstream.
Comments

Oh ya 3 year ago
Living proof that mankind is slipping backwards.

Newsletter

Related Articles

London Daily
0:00
0:00
Close
Israel Warns France of Iranian Threats at Paris Olympics
Possible Successors to Rishi Sunak as Conservative Party Leader
Olaf Scholz to Run for German Chancellor Again in 2025
TikTok Fined by UK Regulator for Child Safety Data Reporting Failures
Miracle Baby Born After Gaza Airstrike
Global Tech Outage Caused by Bug in CrowdStrike's Software
Ukrainian FM Open to Peace Talks with Russia, China Reports
EU to Transfer Interest from Frozen Russian Funds to Ukraine
Greenpeace Co-Founder Paul Watson Arrested in Greenland
EU Relocates Summit to Punish Hungary over Orban's Ukraine Visit
Netanyahu Seeks Meeting with Trump During Washington Visit
World's Hottest Day Recorded on July 21
UK Labour Government To Halt Migrant Housing on Accommodation Barge
President Biden Returns to White House After Testing COVID Negative
Trump Says Kamala Harris Would Be Easier Election Opponent Than Biden
Thousands Protest in Mallorca Against Mass Tourism
Immigration Crackdown Targets Car Washes and Beauty Sector
Nigeria's Controversial Return to Colonial-Era National Anthem
Hacking Vulnerabilities: Androids vs. iPhones
Ukraine Crisis Should Be EU's Responsibility, Says Trump’s Envoy
A Week of Turmoil: Key Moments in US Politics
Barrow's Sacred Heart Primary School Faces Long-Term Closure
German National Sentenced to Death in Belarus
Elon Musk's Companies Drop CrowdStrike After Global Windows 10 Outage
US Advises India on Russian Ties Amid Geopolitical Shifts
Trump Pledges to End Ukraine Conflict if Reelected
Global IT Outage Unveils Digital Vulnerabilities
Global IT Outage Sparks Questions About Financial Accountability
CrowdStrike Bug Affects 8.5 Million Windows Devices
Flights Resume After Major Microsoft Outage
US Criticizes International Court's Opinion on Israeli Occupation
CrowdStrike Update Causes Global IT Outage Due to Skipped Quality Checks
EU’s Patronizing Attitude Towards Africa Revealed
Netanyahu Denounces World Court Ruling on Israeli Occupation
Adidas Drops Bella Hadid Over Controversy
Global Outage Caused by CrowdStrike Update Impacts Millions
Massive Flight Cancellations Across the U.S. Due to Microsoft Outage
Global Windows Outage Causes Chaos Across Banks, Airlines, and More
Russia Accuses Ukraine of Using Chemical Weapons
UK's Flawed COVID-19 Planning Exposed by Inquiry
Ursula von der Leyen Wins Second Term as European Commission President
Police Officer Injured in Attack in Central Paris
Hulk Hogan absolutely tore it up at the RNC.
Paris is being "cleansed" of migrants and homeless people ahead of the Olympics.
Lamine Yamal arriving at his school after winning the Euros
Campaigners Urge UK Government to Block Shein's London IPO
UK Labour Government's Legislative Agenda
UK Labour Government to Regulate Powerful AI Models
Record Heat Temperatures in Ukraine Amid Power Crisis
UK Government Plans to Remove 92 Hereditary Peers from House of Lords
×