The Artist Archive is a precious ally for the protection and promotion of the artistic and economic heritage of an artist’s life, in favor of the future of his production, in aid of gallery owners and in support of collectors.
Today we discover the Merz Foundation and its Archive, which carry on the knowledge and enhancement of the works of Mario and Marisa Merz thanks to the commitment of their daughter Beatrice, with the presence of a scientific committee.
The committee is composed of Frances Morris (Director at Tate Modern, London), Vicente Todolí (Artistic Advisor Hangar Bicocca, Milan), Richard Flood (Former Director of Special Project & Curator at Large New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York) and Mariano Boggia (Merz’s Collection Manager).
The Merz Foundation is based in Turin, a contemporary art center established in 2005, with the aim of hosting exhibitions, events, educational activities and carrying out research and in-depth study of the art of Mario and Marisa Merz, both important exponents of Arte Povera.
The Foundation alternates exhibitions dedicated to Mario and Marisa Merz as moments of reflection and study with large site-specific projects by national and international artists invited to deal with the space of the Foundation and its content, without neglecting research on the new generations for which exhibition events are regularly organized.
The Merz Archive is housed in the same building, which has the task of organizing knowledge and promoting the safeguarding of the artist’s activity by collecting documentation regarding his work.
The Merz Archive was created to make up for the artist’s lack of cataloging of the works. Initially, a first register was created starting from the existing publications, subsequently supplemented by a screening to map the placement of the works in the most important international collections, both public and private. Meanwhile, the Archive has begun the collection and systematization of documents, photographs, publications, printed materials, correspondence in order to catalog the artist’s production. The Archive proceeds to register the works which, according to the unquestionable assessment of the Scientific Committee, it deems most relevant for the purposes of defining the catalog raisonné; also reserves the right to ask for the work to be viewed.
Although still in the implementation phase and constant research, the Archive is a reference point for collectors, gallery owners and scholars who require information for their research or confirmations on the works that are presented on the market. The Archive also provides advice on conservation and restoration in order to define a universally valid restoration practice.
Requests for certification of authenticity are also very frequent. The Merz Archive does not issue authentications for the works of Mario Merz: it produces an Archival Authentication for all those works that the Scientific Committee considers authentic and which will make up the catalog raisonné.
In this way, the Merz Archive acts as a guarantor of the protection of the authenticity and integrity of the works of Mario Merz, so as to prevent the spread of false or counterfeit works on the market.The fundamental objective of the Merz Archive is the dissemination of knowledge of Mario Merz’s artistic heritage thanks to the creation of the catalog, ordering and systematization of the data and documents subject to archiving.
Fundamental for the Archive will be to digitize the documentation and automate the archiving procedure of the works of art in a simple and innovative way thanks to the use of professional tools capable of responding to the highest standards of security and privacy, for a constant dialogue with collectors. and market players.
Among these, Art Rights, a platform for the management and certification of works of art which, thanks to Blockchain technology, offers the opportunity to create the first “Passport of the work of art” in support of not Artists and Collectors, but for the benefit of the important work done by the Artist Archives.
And you, are you ready to discover the Merz Archive?
The 60 NFT OVRlands hexagons that make up the Eiffel Tower were sold on OpenSea for $ 106,900!
These NFT OVRlands are among the 1.6 trillion hexagons in which OVR, a decentralized platform for Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality, has divided the world. Those who own these NFTs can thus create their own virtual universe and who knows where the Eiffel Tower of Paris will end!
2) The 5 record NFT sales are Cryptopunk and Meebit
Cryptopunk and Meebit NFTs reach record sales figures once again!
Meebit editions # 19729 and # 16590 sold on the Larva Labs platform for 245 ETH (about $ 1.01 million) and 59 ETH (about $ 243,320), respectively, while Cryptopunk # 3795, # 9764 and # 8075 for 62 ETH (about $ 252,440), respectively ), 43 ETH (about $ 180,800) and 37 ETH (about $ 152,590).
1/ I’m excited to introduce @BurntFinance to the world today
TLDR: We are building a decentralized auction protocol on @solana to enable anyone to create and sell a wide range of NFTs as well as synthetics. https://t.co/8petcGQZPB
Anonymous crypto artist Burnt Banksy received $ 3 million from a private investor to launch BurntFinance, a new NFT sales platform on the Solana (SOL) blockchain. This future marketplace also aims to solve the persistent problem of the manipulation of offers and gas fees that are too high. But was it really necessary to burn a Banksy work?
Sotheby’s and CoinBase together to sell Banksy in cryptocurrencies
For the first time, Bitcoin and Ether cryptocurrencies are accepted for payment for a physical work of art at the auction house.
Sotheby’s, thanks to an agreement with Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchange platforms in the world, announces the new cryptocurrency payment option for one of the works of the most revolutionary artist of our days: Banksy.
“Love is in The Air” by the mysterious street artist will be shown on May 12 in New York during the Contemporary Art Evening Auction with an estimate between 3 and 5 million dollars. The bids by collectors will be in dollars as usual, but whoever wins the work will have the opportunity to pay in cryptocurrencies.
Currently, the large auction houses are dealing with the crypto world, which opens up a large market, unprecedented sales methods and new passionate collectors. The first months of 2021 focused on crypto mania, with many artists and collectors ready to discover the possibilities offered.
The choice of Sotheby’s and the agreement with Coinbase opens a new path for the art market, and follows the success of the latest auctions from February to today in the major auction houses in the world.Christie’s was the first to open its doors to crypto artists with the now famous $ 69 million sale for Beeple’s work “Everydays: The First 5000 Days” on March 11, 2021.
In April, its historic “rival” Sotheby’s grossed nearly $ 17 million for artist Pak’s NFT collection, which was sold with support from Nifty Gateway.
And now with the decision to accept cryptocurrencies as payment for a physical work, Sotheby’s takes an important step, never taken before, addressing new collectors with a different, inclusive approach.The work in question “Love is in The Air” is one of Banksy’s best known works, which has become an icon of protest that sees as the subject a boy in the typical position that refers to civic disorder, throwing a bouquet of flowers, thus eliminating the violent note.
The subject appeared as graffiti for the first time in 2003 in Bethlehem, on the 760 km long West Bank wall that separates Palestine from Israel. And you, are you ready to find out if it will be a crypto collector to win Banksy?
Interview with Mario Cristiani – Associazione Arte Continua and Co-Founder Galleria Continua
Over thirty years ago one of the best known Italian galleries on the world scene was born: Galleria Continua was founded by Mario Cristiani, Lorenzo Fiaschi and Maurizio Rigillo. A strong sense of belonging to the community, to the value of art for our society, where works of art by great artists inserted above all in peripheral contexts for a fruition within everyone’s reach led to the birth, at the same time, of the Continuous Art Association.
The project and fundraisers, still in progress and in full development today, have made it possible to realize ideas and visions inspired by the idea of corporate social responsibility.
Among the projects carried out: Arte all’Arte. Art Architecture Landscape, Renaissance Nascimento. Art Energy Sustainability, Art x Wine = Water, Art Pollino, UMOCA.
In this interview with one of the founders of Galleria Continua and the Associazione Arte Continua, Mario Cristiani, we discover what has happened in these thirty years of activity, the artists involved and the latest projects carried out in Tuscany between Prato, Florence and the involvement of the Uffizi Galleries.
Even in times of pandemic the Associazione Arte Continua does not stop. The latest major project sees the collaboration, on the occasion of the celebrations of Monday, with the Uffizi Galleries and the Municipality of Florence. Tell us about the project
MARIO CRISTIANI: The Arte Continua Association that I founded with Lorenzo Fiaschi and Maurizio Rigillo now 31 years ago, has had a long period of activity focused more on fundraising Arte x Vino = Water than on projects in the cities. donated € 2,000,000 in different parts of the world. Now with the emergency triggered by the pandemic, we have thought that the pendulum of our activities must return to the places we started from and can finally find the support and involvement of other public and private partners, who can tackle the issue of regeneration of a more balanced relationship between city and countryside, through the involvement of geographically similar areas and prevailing activities.
The goal is to start from the cities of art, to make art in the cities become a basic element, and not a last-minute addition, so it is enough to do some murals of the first one that happens or that the politician on duty to create the redevelopment of the suburbs or an urban regeneration.
It is not enough and you cannot get away with these improvisations to please the many or the few followers of Instagram, precisely for this apparent ease we must insist even more on what, how and who to involve in public discourse. This applies whether the intervention is carried out by private individuals or whether it is carried out by public administrations.
It is essential to reduce possible errors in making projects that are visible to all. Those who do not have the possibility of access – either for cultural training or for lack of economic resources – must be able to find in the public space that sense of sharing and accessibility of the works selected and proposed by professionals in the sector, curators or non-profit structures like ours that , they act to involve artists from the international art community who have their own idea of the world.
It is important where they come from, but what matters is where they know how to go and where they can lead us, to us who are not artists and above all how likely they are to last over time.
Our project started in the countryside, it went towards the villages first and then through the industrialized countryside and the rethinking of the industrial areas towards the breaking of the idea of the suburbs, for which we are working on the idea of artists’ council houses, which make it clear that if it is the whole community that raises its level, and stimulates the improvement of every part of the built-up area, starting with those who are not normally called to participate and feel the less part of the community, everything can rise in level.
In 2020, 30 years have passed since the foundation of the Associazione Arte Continua, founded together with the Galleria Continua: what has changed since then for the association?
MARIO CRISTIANI: Before we were strangers who spoke to a few close friends, today thanks to the great work we have done on a global scale, especially with the Galleria Continua, and our entrepreneurial ability – a bit crazy when evaluated in terms of a normal business – we can make people understand and spread the possibility of art not only to change individuals and the spaces they own, but to create synergies and correspondences between the inside and the outside.
Perhaps truly starting a different relationship between cities and countryside, between large “re-forested” or “re-ruralized” centers, allowing us a less dramatically dangerous relationship, especially for the future of people.
I am convinced that the artists of the international art community can give us indications of how to venture into a future that is once again open to hope, rather than to the growing threat to the survival of our species and the others that we will carry after us, if we do not change our path quickly. and we take the right direction.
Perhaps our reading of considering the countryside prompted us to go to China in 2004, then to the countryside around Paris, and then to Cuba and then to Brazil, before returning to Rome and even more to central Paris in the Marais
It is now on a national scale that we start again with “Arte All’Arte” in the small villages, and with the cities of the future. For now, involving Prato and Florence, and then extending the action we had started in Vinci and Scandicci, where we carried out in alliance with the municipalities, the European project “Arte all’Arte Rinascimento – Nascimento, technical art, technology and science” with the aim of creating an environmental technological artistic district that can be a model for rethinking the entire industrialized countryside and the cities that are part of it.
Giuseppe Penone Abete, 2013 acciaio inossidabile, bronzo 2240 × 600 × 600 cm Photo by Ela Bialkowska, OKNOstudio Photo Courtesy Associazione Arte Continua APS
Why should city public administrations bring more Contemporary Art to our cities in contact with people?
MARIO CRISTIANI: It is a right to information and a way to allow people to feel in the world, even from a small place or on the edge of a built-up area. It is an inspiration for young people to think that Culture and Art are ways to build their identity and also a possibility of social mobility as well as the ecology of gaze and thought. And above all not to let the market alone dictate the law, also allowing artists and gallery owners to work together for an objective that concerns everyone and in which their skills, even for free, can allow to give space to the cooperative part as well as the competitive one.
For this reason, it is essential that the non-profit structure can support the commercial one, paraphrasing the Latins, philosophizing today more than ever makes sense and will allow us to overcome the stage of survival. And then we find Dante and his “facts you weren’t living like brutes.” It is wonderful to find two great artists capable of creating, with their works, a strong dialogue with the context: in Prato in Piazza Duomo “SHY” by Antony Gormley, which will remain until mid-July, and in Florence in Piazza della Signoria, until mid-September, Giuseppe Penone’s “Abete” will be found, which will be followed by the exhibition “Trees in verse” at the Uffizi Galleries from 28 June.
What is the future of the Association for the next 30 years?
What is the future for the next 30 years Well, before moving on to a better life I would like to see the artist’s council houses built as habitable sculptures, with energy saving, the construction of air factories, with neighborhood gardens, in the context of urban reforestation. In these new or old renovated houses, some apartments should be allocated for young artists, in proportion to the number of tenants, and exhibition spaces that connect the contemporary art museum in the area or even where there is no dedicated structure, to give opportunities to grow and compete for the improvement and maintenance of the daily life space generated by the artists. Transforming industrialized countryside areas, always with the same system, with those who save energy, recover water and purify sludge, reduce co2 emissions, participate in reforestation by having verified and internationally credible certifications, have the opportunity to tax deductions or cost reduction in order to transform the exterior of the sheds into works of art. In any case, our association wants to ask artists who are friends of the international art community to lower their remuneration, and participate with us, in this case as a non-profit activity, to start this path, I am sure that people ready to do there is a step in this direction and there will be more and more. We are ready. of the Association?
MARIO CRISTIANI: To come to the next appointments of this 2021, there will be the continuation of the project on the cities of the Future starting from the municipality of Prato, and the Pecci center for contemporary art, the exhibition by Giuseppe Penone in collaboration with the Uffizi and the municipality of Florence. The restoration of Nari Ward’s work “Illuminate Sanctuary of Empty Sins” at the Poggibonsi incinerator, the restoration of Jannis Kounellis’ work in Montalcino, and we hope to be able to carry out the restoration of the UMOCA work by Cai Guo Qiang in Colle Val d ‘Elsa, and a great surprise in San Gimignano, which we still cannot say, this for 11 and 12 September next.
For the next few years, “Arte All’Arte” will take place in the area between Viterbo and lower Tuscany, another project will be in the South, and another in the North West, but we will talk about it in the future when they are closer.
Who is Dangiuz: identikit of an Italian Crypto Artist
His cyberpunk works attract attention on the SuperRare platform
After the success of the first crypto art auction promoted by Christie’s with Beeple and that of Sotheby’s in collaboration with Pak and Nifty Gateway, the world of art has turned the spotlight on the vast universe of digital art in NFT.
The sale of Beeple’s Everydays – The First 5000 Days for $ 69 million led to a veritable artistic revolution.
There are many crypto artists who populate the NFT sales platforms, where digital works that cannot be reproduced and cannot be changed (Non-Fungible Token) are published every day, thanks to Blockchain technology.
One of these is Dangiuz, the stage name of Leopoldo D’Angelo, an Italian crypto artist born in Turin in 1995.
The strong passion for technology led him to experiment with the use of graphic software, thus achieving digital works with a precise aesthetic, a mirror of the complexity of contemporary man inserted in a cyberpunk-futurist context, all seasoned with undeniable references. to the 80s.
His style, as stated by himself in the interview for Idiotist, is the son of pop culture and famous science fiction works such as 1984 by George Orwell, Ghost in the Shell and Blade Runner.
Dangiuz is now established on the SuperRare platform, one of the most famous in the world, so much so that it stands in the top 5 of the most popular artists, with a total sales in recent months of over $ 300,000.
Crypto art and the canonical world of galleries still travel on parallel tracks, which is why in order to gain visibility, in addition to being present on the most popular MarketPlace, crypto artists build a dense network of contacts on the most popular social networks.
Dangiuz’s Instagram profile has a following of 63.4 thousand followers, but Twitter is the social network he prefers and where every day he communicates and interacts with his community which currently has almost 20 thousand followers.
Appointment instead tomorrow 12 May at 6 pm live on the social network TikTok where Dangiuz together with the Art Tech Entrepreneur and Blockchain and NFT expert Andrea Concas will reveal what NFTs are, how a digital work of art for the crypto world is born , the moment of the drop, the advantages and disadvantages of this phenomenon to be discovered.
In the growing NFT market, new artists make space every day, ready to make their voices heard.
Opere d’arte perse e ora ritrovate: ecco le migliori!
Scopriamo i capolavori spariti nel nulla e ricomparsi dopo decenni!
Gli appassionati d’arte sanno che spesso certi tesori si nascondono in luoghi dove nessuno si aspetterebbe di trovarli!
Tra le soffitte di vecchi palazzi o sui banchetti dei mercatini delle pulci, spesso ricompaiono opere d’arte o beni scomparsi da tempo che, venduti prima a prezzi irrisori, si rivelano poi essere pezzi di grandissimo valore!
Ecco i migliori capolavori della storia dell’arte persi e poi ritrovati!
Gustav Klimt, “Ritratto di signora” (1916-17)
Scomparso nel 1997, il ritrovamento nel 2019, dopo 23 anni, di questo ritratto femminile di Klimt ha dell’incredibile: è stato infatti scoperto accidentalmente da due giardinieri mentre pulivano un muro della stessa galleria da cui era stato rubato anni prima, la Ricci Oddi di Piacenza.
Una tela che è un vero e proprio tesoro: la versione definitiva dell’opera è infatti frutto di un ripensamento dato che sotto la figura attuale era raffigurata un’altra ragazza probabilmente nascosta in seguito dall’artista per dimenticare il dolore della sua morte.
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, “Ritratto di donna come Flora”, (1760 ca.)
Nascosto appena dopo la realizzazione nella soffitta di un castello francese perché ritenuto troppo sensuale, questo dipinto, forse commissionato al grande artista del Settecento veneziano dall’Imperatrice Elisabetta di Russia, è ricomparso nel 2008 dopo 250 lunghi anni! Venduto da Christie’s prima per £2.8 milioni e da Sotheby’s poi nel 2017 per $3.1 milioni, l’opera è una vera e propria rarità perché è tra le pochissime sopravvissute di Tiepolo che raffigurano nobildonne dell’epoca nelle vesti di dee dell’antichità.
Rembrandt Van Rijn, “Paziente incosciente (Allegoria dell’odore)”, (ca. 1624-25)
Ritrovata nel 2015 dopo averne perso le tracce, quest’opera giovanile di Rembrandt era stata inizialmente classificata come “notevolmente irrilevante, un ritratto scuro e scolorito di tre persone, una delle quali svenuta”. Dopo numerosi studi e passaggi all’asta, tra i quali quello sorprendete della casa d’aste Nye and Company che da una stima iniziale di $250 l’aveva venduto a $870.000, è stato scoperto che il quadro faceva parte di una serie dedicata ai 5 sensi dal grande pittore olandese e che uno strato di vernice gialla e successivi rimaneggiamenti lo avevano reso quasi irriconoscibile.
Vincent van Gogh, “Tramonto a Montmajour”, (1888)
Acquistata nel 1908 e poi subito nascosta in una soffitta in Norvegia perché ritenuta falsa, quest’opera ha avuto una vicenda tumultuosa proprio come quella del suo autore. Sconosciuta fino al 1970, anno del suo ritrovamento, nel 1991 il Van Gogh Museum di Amsterdam si rifiutò di autenticarla, credendola, ancora una volta, non dipinta dal maestro olandese. Dopo vari studi l’attribuzione è stata confermata e nel 2013 lo stesso Van Gogh Museum ha presentato al mondo il dipinto definendolo come appartenente al periodo francese, il più felice della produzione dell’artista.
Caravaggio (Attribuzione), “Giuditta e Oloferne” (ca. 1607)
Se l’attribuzione a Caravaggio di questo quadro venisse confermata allora avremmo di fronte un grandissimo capolavoro. Ritrovata nel 2014 da un banditore d’asta francese dopo secoli di sparizione “appoggiata a un muro in una soffitta buia, ingombra e con perdite”, l’opera “polverosa e macchiata d’acqua” sarebbe scampata ad una serie di furti e ora si troverebbe in mano ad un collezionista del quale non è mai stata rivelata l’identità. Un ritrovamento davvero eccezionale, ma come sempre avvolto nel mistero quando si tratta del grande maestro lombardo!
Photo Credits: “Ritratto di Signora” di Gustav Klimt courtesy of Galleria Ricci Oddi
Every day, Art Rights Magazine selects the best news from the world of digital art, to stay up to date!
Una grafica sul blog di Opensea
1) Opensea first for sales volumes
The newly released statistics from April 2021 reveal that Opensea is the first NFT marketplace by sales volume with a turnover of $ 138.79 million! However, only AtomicMarket and The Sandbox Marketplace recorded a significant increase in turnover, respectively by 424.44% and 1451.32%, compared to minor increases or even decreases for the other sales platforms.
Alex Khadavi in his megamansion
2) An NFT gallery in Bel Air
Star dermatologist Alex Khadavi owns a super mansion in Bel Air which includes a space to display his NFT collection! The house includes a “multisensory” NFT art gallery, consisting of seven large multimedia screens scattered around the house. Valued at $ 7 million, the collection is available for sale and includes pieces by Ghost Girl – a 3D artist who offers visual experiences for “VJing”, real-time visual performance – and Bighead, a well-known record producer and DJ.
Beeple at Frieze NY. PH Katya Kazakina
3) Beeple visits Frieze New York
Beeple visited Frieze New York, the first physical art fair that took place in New York after the lockdown. Crypto artist Mike Winkelmann said it was his first time at a real art fair, announcing that he is in talks with a gallery to create his first solo show.
On one side is Chinese tech entrepreneur Justin Sun, and on the other side is Indian collector Vignesh Sundaresan, aka Metakovan, a programmer and angel investor in blockchaintechnology.
By a mere 20 seconds, Justin Sun was bested by Metakovan during an auction at Christie’s in which the coveted first NFTwork ever to be hammered in an institutional auction house was contested.
In a lengthy chain of 12 tweets Justin Sun stated, “I attended Christie’s auction to purchase the NFT work “Everydays: the first 5000 days”. My final effective bid was $60M (plus Buyer’s Premium for a total of $69M). However, in the last 20 seconds it was outbid by $250,000 by another buyer. The difference was less than 0.3% of the total price.”
After Beeple’s blown deal, Sun recently fought back by purchasing a Picasso painting, “Femme nue couchée au collier (Marie-Thérese)” from 1932 for a price of $20 million from Christie’s in London.
In addition to Picasso’s work, Justin Sun also purchased Andy Warhol’s “Three Self Portraits” (1986) for $2 million.
Christie’s confirmed that Sun has purchased the works for its “JUST NFT Fund” which aims to register major artworks by major artists in NFT on the blockchain.
The fund will only accept works by blue chip artists valued at more than $1 million.
If until a few weeks ago Sun was planning to tokenize the recently purchased Picasso and Warhol works in its possession by minting NFTs, here it is just a few moments ago announcing that it has done so.
The JUST NFT fund has created the world’s first Picasso NFT: the property is mapped to the TRON chain via the TRC-721 blockchain standard. As such it will be “permanently stored on the TRON public chain and BTFS, marking the first solo show in the history of Picasso works on the blockchain.
Justin Sun’s comment was not long in coming: “I firmly believe that in the next ten years, 50% of the world’s top 100 artists and artworks will be NFTed. The JUST NFT Fund will embrace and strengthen this trend. ” – commented Justin Sun.
Stolen art: more than half a million works recovered in 2020
Trafficking in stolen art continues even in pandemic: over half a million works were recovered in 2020.
Art dealers were unfazed by the pandemic, taking advantage of the lockdown that shut down museums, galleries and cultural centers to carry out theft and forgery.
According to the dossier “Operational Activity 2020” of thespecialized unit of the Weaponry, 501,574 are the art assets that the Command of the Carabinieri for the Protection of Cultural Heritage recovered in 2020.
Among these goods, the “thieves of beauty” raided antiques, archives and books (483,978); followed by archaeological, paleontological and numismatic finds from clandestine excavations (17,596).
In addition, 1,547 art forgeries were found which, had they been placed on the market and sold, would have resulted in an illicit turnover of over 415 million euros.
Thanks to the interventions and searches of the Blue Helmets of Culture, thefts decreased by 17.6% (287 compared to 345 in 2019).
Here are some figures: libraries registered a 50% decrease, from 12 to 6; places of worship, such as churches and monasteries, reduced by 17%, from 135 to 112 stolen works; -21.4% instead for museums that from 14 stolen works in 2019 arrive at 11. On the other hand, the figure for archives remains unchanged: 8 exactly as in 2019.
2020 was also the year of much-needed rediscoveries and finds: here are a few examples!
The splendid Head of a Roman female divinity, dating back to the first century AD and stolen in 1977 from the Roman Forum, has been identified following international investigations.
The work “Ritratto di Signora” (Portrait of a Lady) by Gustave Klimt was accidentally found a few months ago in a cavity of the Ricci Oddi Gallery in Piacenza, after having been lost for over twenty years.
An ancient painting by Cimabue found in the Parisian countryside which, after being certified as authentic, was sold for 24 million euros.
During the 2020s, with cultural venues closed and markets at a standstill, illicit trafficking shifted primarily abroad, requiring cooperation between foreign police forces, Europol and Interpol to successfully find and repatriate many stolen works of art.
Among the counterfeited works, alongside fakes by Balla, Schifano, Warhol and De Chirico, we also find van Gogh and the seizure of 134 apocryphal works by Silvano Campeggi, author of the most important posters in the history of cinema, such as “Gone with the Wind” and “Ben Hur”.
Thanks to the use of increasingly sophisticated technologies to support the research and protection of works of art, the risk of the circulation of reproductions and forgeries illegally placed on the market is destined to decrease considerably in the near future.
“The advent of new technologies, which we are working on, will allow us to achieve better and better results,” promises General Roberto Riccardi, commander of the Tpc.
Among these, the Art Rights platform for the management and certification of works of art that, thanks to blockchain technology, allows to create a real Passport of the Work of Art to protect the authenticity of the work for Artists, Collectors and Operators in the sector.
Photo Credits: La Domenica del Corriere magazine, published September 1911. Illustration: Achille Beltrame (1871-1945); photo: DeAgostini / Getty Images
1) Kamiar Maleki founds the first NFT residence in the world
Collector, curator and philanthropist Kamiar Maleki has announced that he is working on the construction of the world’s first residence for NFT. Maleki is collaborating with several personalities from the art world, such as rapper TINIE and Crypto Artists Vector Meldrew and Dumi. The project also includes the first live performance by invitation coined in NFT.
Announcing 'Natively Digital: A Curated NFT Sale'–an online sale that brings together a group survey of the leading NFT artists. Open for bidding from 3-10 June, the auction features the rare Alien CryptoPunk #7523 from the collection of @sillytuna & more https://t.co/hGKSbU09gKpic.twitter.com/OFu4Apxvpy
2)Sotheby’s announces the first NFT auction: Natively Digital
From 3 to 10 June Sotheby’s is auctioning a collection of works by leading NFT artists on the site. Natively Digital is co-curated by Digital Artist Robert Alice and is split into six categories focused on pre-Ethereum works and more recent Crypto Art works. Part of the proceeds from the sale is donated to the Mint Funt and the Sevens Foundation to incentivize artists to join the Crypto world.
i am working uber hard with my team on launching the auction
3)Entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk ready to launch NFT works
Gary Vaynerchuk is working on a new project dedicated to Crypto Art: his first collection of NFT works. “When I saw this human macro trend, the only way for me to help others understand it was to be part of it,” said Vaynerchuk. The VeeFriends series of works will soon be available for purchase through Ethereum and part of the proceeds will be donated to charity.
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L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici.L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici anonimi. Senza un mandato di comparizione, una conformità volontaria da parte del vostro Fornitore di Servizi Internet, o ulteriori registrazioni da parte di terzi, le informazioni memorizzate o recuperate per questo scopo da sole non possono di solito essere utilizzate per l'identificazione.
Marketing
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per creare profili di utenti per inviare pubblicità, o per tracciare l'utente su un sito web o su diversi siti web per scopi di marketing simili.
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Funzionale
Always active
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono strettamente necessari al fine legittimo di consentire l'uso di un servizio specifico esplicitamente richiesto dall'abbonato o dall'utente, o al solo scopo di effettuare la trasmissione di una comunicazione su una rete di comunicazione elettronica.
Preferenze
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per lo scopo legittimo di memorizzare le preferenze che non sono richieste dall'abbonato o dall'utente.
Statistiche
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici.L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici anonimi. Senza un mandato di comparizione, una conformità volontaria da parte del vostro Fornitore di Servizi Internet, o ulteriori registrazioni da parte di terzi, le informazioni memorizzate o recuperate per questo scopo da sole non possono di solito essere utilizzate per l'identificazione.
Marketing
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per creare profili di utenti per inviare pubblicità, o per tracciare l'utente su un sito web o su diversi siti web per scopi di marketing simili.