Welcome Christie’s first NFT auction…? NFT or a non-fungible token is a special type of digital artwork that represents something unique.
NFTs are not mutually interchangeable and are thus not fungible.
Read What makes Crypto art so valuable?
The following written content from Michela Moscufo
The first purely digital work sold by an established auction house brings blockchain into the world of fine art.
Christie’s auction house sold its first purely digital artwork Thursday for a record $69 million, the highest price paid for an NFT, or nonfungible token.
The work, “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,” is by Mike Winkelmann, who goes by the name Beeple. The work is a collage of 5,000 drawings, one created and posted every day for the past 13 and a half years.
Originally created with pen and paper and now mostly illustration software, the sketches run the gamut from an angular line drawing of his first baby to Hillary Clinton and well-known cartoon characters.
The winning bidder owns the work in the form of a unique string of code, called a nonfungible token. The piece has no physical presence and will be “delivered directly from Beeple to the buyer, accompanied by a unique NFT encrypted with the artist’s unforgeable signature and uniquely identified on the blockchain,” Christie’s said.
NFTs have surged in popularity in recent months. The singer and visual artist Grimes sold $6 million worth of digital art last month, and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is auctioning off his first tweet — a March 21, 2006, post that reads “just setting up my twttr” — as a nonfungible token. Bidding is currently at $2.5 million.
Noah Davis, a specialist in post-war and contemporary art for Christie’s, brought Beeple to the auction house’s attention after witnessing the graphic artist’s growing popularity.
“The first 10 minutes of this sale we had more than 100 bids placed. We went from an opening bid of $100 to more than $1 million. We had bidders from seven different countries,” Davis told Yahoo Finance.
Beeple’s digital pictures have already won him 1.8 million followers on Instagram and collaborations with Louis Vuitton, Katy Perry and Nike.
NFTs can also do what Picasso’s genius could not: generate a future stream of profits for the artist each time the work changes hands.
“Every time that token is traded, I will get 10 percent,” digital artist Jimmy Simmons told NBC News. “It’s a new frontier, a new contract.” Read more from NBC