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    The Uffizi Galleries on Clubhouse

    The Uffizi Galleries on Clubhouse

    The appointments dedicated to art and culture continue on ClubHouse together with Andrea Concas, who after great protagonists such as the artists Emilio Isgrò and Michelangelo Paladino, the architects Cino Zucchi and Michele De Lucchi, the directors Stefano Boeri and Arturo Galansino, land on the social media of the voice the director of the Uffizi Galleries Eike Schmidt.

    Il direttore degli Uffizi Eike Schmidt (Photo credit: ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)

    The director of the Uffizi Galleries, Eike Schmidt, participated for the first time in a room on ClubHouse hosted by Andrea Concas who in recent months has invited the great protagonists of the world of art and culture.

    Several present who interacted with the director. These include the journalist and art historian Fiorella Minervino, the Repubblica journalist and writer Annarita Briganti, the director of State Museums Roberto Concas, the journalist Bettina Bush and many others.

    La Room di Andrea Concas che ha ospitato Eike Schmidt

    Many topics were addressed: among these, museum strategies to “resist” in times of pandemic, the relationship between museum, new generations, and new technologies, in particular communication, the scenarios of change for the cultural heritage sector in the near future and also an indiscretion on the new set-up.

    “The work of the Uffizi is a team effort” – says the director. The Museum employs many professionals with different backgrounds. There are many questions on the relationship between museum and digital.

    “Yours is a vision of Museum 3.0, a perfect combination of physical and digital” says Andrea Concas. In fact, in the director’s vision, digital will never replace the physical. This is demonstrated by the fact that the various projects dedicated to children and schools during the last year in which school trips were prohibited, only aroused more curiosity and desire to visit the Museum.

    “We need to bring the new generations closer to art,” says Eike Schmidt.

    This can be done by working on different levels of communication with the aim of reaching young people by talking to them with self-irony and lightness, but without forgetting the importance of the content of the messages to be conveyed.

    Great attention is also paid to women, both as regards the choice of artists – the Uffizi has the largest collection of works of art created by female artists before the nineteenth century – and because the pink share of followers is 75% and on Facebook. that on Tik Tok and in general also on the other social networks where the museum is present.

    Una veduta esterna della Galleria degli Uffizi

    Eike Schmidt also anticipated that “The new rooms are already set up and we will inaugurate them the same day we reopen the Museum (probably within the first week of May) we are at the very last touches. At the very beginning of this new path dedicated to the painting of the sixteenth century will be the Annunciation by Plautilla Nelli which will already be seen from afar “.

    In fact, in this new exhibition, the director reveals precisely on ClubHouse, the importance of Plautilla can be admired, between Fra Bartolomeo, who left his drawings to the painter, and Andrea del Sarto, with whom the historical narration continues at the Uffizi.

    Everything is ready to start again, but you have to stick to the rules. “According to the point of view of various scientific studies – added Schmidt – most small museums do not pose any risk of crowding more than most shops. It is therefore really difficult to understand, when the shops are open, why at least smaller museums cannot be. Then there is an important study by the Technical University of Berlin that says precisely that museums and theaters are the safest places of all, when anti-Covid rules are respected “. 

    It is therefore necessary to be ready and rethink the arrangements and methods of access to the Museums. But the Uffizi are well aware of this, in fact they had already begun to rethink rooms such as that of Botticelli and Michelangelo which were previously accessed by a single door.

    Next step already thought by the director Schmidt, before Covid, the possibility of booking the visit online to avoid long queues and waiting hours.

    The Uffizi is ready more than ever to welcome visitors.

    Who is the crypto artist Pak

    Who is the crypto artist Pak

    Pak is Elon Musk’s favorite crypto artist, now up for auction at Sotheby’s

    Pak is a crypto NFT artist who has been active in the digital art world for over two decades.

    His identity is shrouded in mystery: we know that he is founder and lead designer of the Undream studio and creator of Archillect, an artificial intelligence built to discover and share stimulating visual contents on different social media.

    Archillect is a real digital revolution because it is configured as a digital curator who, based on specific keywords, searches for images with minimal and aesthetically cold tones, in total autonomy, without obeying an emotional grammar or requiring external human intervention.

    In the burgeoning NFT market, Pak has established himself as a creator of stunning digital artwork leveraging the most innovative technologies and media of the moment.

    Pak has a very active and successful market: the total value of his digital works is around $ 17,536,770.67 (8,457,896 ETH). To date it has sold 1,691 works and the most expensive was Metarift purchased in March 2020 on Makerplace from an anonymous collector – whose nickname is “danny6” for $ 1,013,902.38 (489 ETH).

    While the identity of Pak’s collectors is unclear, among his admirers we find Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, a supporter of the NFT world, so much so that he decided to put his first Tweet as an NFT up for sale.

    Today it seems that even the traditional art world has noticed Pak’s talent: Sotheby’s has in fact decided to inaugurate its first auction of an NFT work with the artist’s creations.

    Sotheby’s said: “We wanted to collaborate with Pak because we are entering a whole new world with digital art and we felt it was important to work with an artist who has been active in the community for many years.”

    In fact, Pak has attracted the attention of the world of traditional art: his tweet dates back to January 5: “Global auction houses. This is for you. I want this piece of art. Show us all. I’ll choose. “

    In response, Sotheby’s replied with: “We are intrigued…”

    Since that tweet, the step has been short and the collaboration between PAK and Sotheby’s has begun.

    From 12 to 13 April 2021 Sotheby’s is auctioning The Fungible Collection, a collection of his latest works that includes the Fungible Open Editions series, Pak’s latest investigation into the concept of value.

    These editions consist of a series of NFT “cubes” that can be purchased over and over again by collectors during the sale period for a fixed price of $ 500.

    These fungible cubes can be purchased individually or in groups and provide the collector with a different set of NFTs based on the total number of cubes he owns. 

    The NFT singles in auction are: A Cube (1), Five Cubes (5), Ten Cubes (10), Twenty Cubes (20), Fifty Cubes (50), Hundred Cubes (100), Five Hundred Cubes (500), Thousand Cubes (1,000).

    The works of this particular collection will be released exclusively on the Nifty Gateway platform, a marketplace specializing in the sale and auctions of non-fungible tokens.

    And you, are you ready to discover Pak’s NFT works?

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – APRIL 9, 2021

    Filename : wbr_1_a_copie.08569160817.original.jpg - To go with "How NFTs are coming to the rescue of forgotten artworks" (published on 2021-03-25 22:16:00)

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – APRIL 9, 2021

    Every day Art Rights Magazine selects the best news from the digital art world to stay up to date!

    1)  A work of the artist Baranoff Rossiné has become an NFT on Mintable.

    On March 25, the work “Abstract Composition” by Ukrainian artist Wladimir Baranoff-Rossiné was auctioned via the Mintable platform. The sale included both the physical work and the NFT consideration. 

    Zach Burks, CEO of Mintable explained, “As someone who straddles the worlds of art and technology with such finesse, we couldn’t think of anyone better than Baranoff-Rossiné to immortalize with our NFTs.”

    2) The art market in NFT fell from $16.7 million to $12.5 million

    Data published by Nonfungible.com shows, in the last five days, the drop in sales of NFT works from $16.7 million to $12.5 million. According to the platform, this is all within the norm.

    Of the same opinion is Melissa Gilmour, founder of London-based NFT agency Lily & Piper, who says “a drop in value was inevitable,” pointing out that “some works of art are holding their own and I don’t think it’s a permanent decline.”

    What then will be the future of Crypto Art?

    3) 9 CryptoPunks from LarvaLabs’ collection sold at Christie’s 

    It’s been three years since Larva Labs, two software developers, started the NFT CryptoPunks” art project, and now, for the first time, a single lot consisting of 9 punks will take part on May 13 in the evening sale organized by Christie’s New York

    “CryptoPunks are the alpha and omega of the CryptoArt movement,” , explains Noah Davis, Christie’s postwar and contemporary art specialist, “This will be a historic sale.”

    The King of the Free Ports: Yves Bouvier

    The King of the Free Ports: Yves Bouvier

    There is a place, tax-free and away from prying eyes, where the world’s largest art collection is kept. 

    This is the free port of Geneva, a place of 150 thousand square meters, which holds works of art, diamonds and archaeological finds worth more than 100 billion Swiss francs

    This, like many other free ports around the world, owes its success to Swiss art dealer and free port magnate Yves Bouvier, CEO of Natural Le Coultre, the world’s leading company specializing in logistics and storage of works of art.

    WHAT ARE FREE PORTS

    The free ports are tax-free extra-territorial warehouses where it is possible to store goods of foreign origin without a time limit, in maximum security and with a range of services such as temperature and humidity control, restoration, certification of authenticity and evaluation. The free ports have always been considered a great opportunity for those who want to invest and speculate on art.

    THE YVES BOUVIER PHENOMENON

    Yves Bouvier is a major player in the art market.

    His ascent began in 1995 when he became deputy director of Natural La Coultre, the family company specializing in the transportation, storage, restoration and conservation of works of art and luxury goods. 

    Under Bouvier’s control, Natural Le Coultre owned 5% of the Geneva Freeport until 2017 and reinvented and exported the freeport model around the world, making it attractive to the luxury goods market.

    In 2010, Bouvier created a new freeport in Singapore, followed in 2014 by one in Luxembourg. Then it was the turn of Shanghai, China.

    The warehouses have been transformed into luxurious showrooms, guarded 24 hours a day, with temperature and humidity constantly controlled to preserve the works of art. Inside the warehouses there are also restoration studios equipped with state-of-the-art technology, lounges for exhibiting masterpieces or organizing auctions.

    However, in order to combat cases of money laundering and evasion, Switzerland, as well as the entire European Union, has since 2018 implemented specific directives to ensure the traceability and origin of assets. 

    One of the proposed solutions is the preparation of a complete inventory of all deposited assets. 

    Among the cutting-edge technological tools, useful to create a digital Art Archive always updated and complete to support Art Professionals and large companies is Art Rights, the first platform for the management and certification of works of art through Blockchain technology.

    And you, did you know the story of Yves Bouvier?

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – APRIL 8, 2021

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – APRIL 8, 2021

    Every day, Art Rights Magazine selects the best news from the world of digital art, to stay up to date!

    1) Singer M.I.A. announces her first NFT drop

    British rapper M.I.A. has announced that she will be auctioning off her first NFT artwork, titled ” GIFTY 1″. The work is part of a larger series called “NFT GARAGE DANCE” and will be available for purchase on Foundation for 24 hours starting today. Afterwards, the artist will release another work, called ” KALA COYN”.

    Tellinga Creates Mail Art That Tells Your Story

    2) Mail-Art company Tellinga puts NFT up for sale 

    U.S. company Tellinga, which specializes in Mail-Art (the sending of drawings and illustrations by mail to share stories or messages) has announced the ability to create NFTs of submitted artwork. The company wants to create a digital version of each work created, while encouraging customers to create and tokenize their purchases as NFTs. 

    In November 2020 the Veronese artist Giovanni Motta published his first NFT work on the SuperRare platform selling it for 7.5 ETH. After only two months he became the number one artist in the SuperRare world ranking, and today he continues to occupy the first places among the best-selling artists thanks to Johnny Boy, the little boy alter ego of the author, as well as the main subject of his works.

    Christie’s gave away 300 free NFTs – they’re worth over $ 100,000 today

    Christie’s gave away 300 free NFTs – they’re worth over $ 100,000 today

    In 2018 Christie’s donated 300 NFTs during the Art and Tech Summit. To date, only 13 people have redeemed them and immediately resold them for hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    In 2018, Christie’s Art and Tech Summit, took place, an annual conference focused on exploring emerging technologies and their potential impact on the art world.

    The theme of that year was the Blockchain and its applications to art.

    The NFT market was still in its infancy: SuperRare had only opened three months earlier, MakersPlace later that year, and the NiftyGateway market arrived over a year later.

    On that occasionJason Bailey, Art Advisor e Direttore di MoCDA – Museum Of Contemporary Digital Art had suggested including a series of NFTs (non-fungible tokens) in the goodie-bags that would be distributed to the participants of the summit.

    The work that was transformed into NFT is “Nude Portrait # 7” by artist Robbie Barrat, whose work “Nude Portrait # 1” was the first to be uploaded to the Overcoming platform on April 5, 2018.

    “Nude Portrait # 7” has been divided into 300 NFTs which, once joined and superimposed, constitute the complete image of the work.

    A work by Robbie Barrat

    How was it possible to “give” digital works in a physical environment?

    For the occasion, gift cards were created containing two codes corresponding to “username” and “password” to be entered online in order to become the owner of a Robbie Barrat NFT work.

    Three years later, the NFT market has exploded and only 13 out of 300 people have applied for their NFTs.

    After this, Robbie Barrat continued to grow and create digital works of art. He is now exhibiting in an exhibition at the Avant Galerie Vossen in Paris and at the AndArt Agency, a creative agency of which Elliot Safra, NFT art collector since 2018, is a partner.

    In recent years, Robbie Barrat has sold numerous works for over $ 100,000 and one of the 13 NFTs mentioned above was resold last year for $ 13,736.

    With the proliferation of news on the NFT market, people have returned to search for gift cards to claim their “Lost Robbies” but at the moment only 4 of the former participants have found the precious gadgets.

    So what will happen to the “Lost Robbies” not received?

    Unless gift cards are found, these works of art can never be claimed. They will certainly be accessible to the public in a virtual museum but will remain forever without an owner.

    Photo Credits: Christie’s Art and Tech Summit 2018

    And you, are you ready to find out how to create your NFTs?

    LE NEWS DAL MONDO DIGITAL E NFT – 7 APRILE 2021

    LE NEWS DAL MONDO DIGITAL E NFT – 7 APRILE 2021

    Ogni giorno Art Rights Magazine seleziona le migliori notizie dal mondo dell’arte digital, per rimanere sempre aggiornati!

    1.Il robot Sophia debutta nel mercato NFT con un’opera da 688mila dollari

    Sophia Instantiation” è il titolo dell’opera realizzata da Sophia, un robot animato da Intelligenza Artificiale, in collaborazione con l’artista italiano Andrea Bonaceto

    L’opera consiste in un video morphing dalla durata di 12 secondi realizzato dallo stesso robot, che riprende l’immagine di un ritratto realizzato dall’artista Andrea Bonaceto.

    L’opera NFT è stata venduta sul marketplace Nifty Gateway per circa 688 mila dollari al misterioso collezionista _888_f.

    2.NFT: dopo Christie’s, anche Phillips e Sotheby’s pronte al debutto

    Sotheby’s e Phillips sono pronte ad entrare nell’universo del mercato della Crypto Arte

    Sotheby’s dal 12 al 14 aprile mette all’asta sul marketplace Nifty Gateway, la collezione The Fungible dell’artista Pak che consiste nella raccolta di Fungible Open Editions, cubi NFT in vendita ad un prezzo fisso di $500.

    Phillips invece mette in vendita “Replicator” dell’artista Mad Dog Jones, che comprende 7 generazioni di opere d’arte.

    La prima,Generation 1”  è l’NFT proposto con una base d’asta di 100 dollari.

    3.La prima mostra italiana di Crypto Arte: Travel Diary

    Travel Diary è la prima mostra collettiva italiana di opere d’arte NFT, curata da Sonia Belfiore e realizzata in collaborazione con Snark.Art.

    L’esposizione è allestita sulla piattaforma Decentraland dove partecipano 8 artisti alle prese per la prima volta con la Crypto Art: Nicola Baratto e Yiannis Mouravas, Giulia Furlan, Alessandro Manfrin, Matteo Pizzolante, Luca Staccioli, Francesco Tagliavia e Luisa Turuani. 

    Photo Credits: Pak, Metanoia, no date. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

    Women Crypto Artists

    Women Crypto Artists

    Graffiti Queens: the first all-female NFT exhibition

    The surprises from the world of Crypto Art continue!

    Among the numerous exhibitions organized on online platforms, since 3 April Decentraland hosts “Graffiti Queens’ Virtual Art Exhibition”, the first collective exhibition of only NFT crypto artists.

    An event that seems to have had considerable media coverage, so much so as to see the participation of characters such as Pussy Riot Viktoria Modesta or the heiress Paris Hilton, who instead talked about it on her social media accounts.


    The curator of the exhibition is CryptoYuna who claims to have discovered Crypto Art in a completely random way. Before arriving in this universe, in fact, CryptoYuna was a traditional artist who painted the reality that was around her, animals and rural landscapes of Missouri.


    In search of a new stimulus and inspiration, the artist accidentally stumbles upon a tweet about Crypto Art … From here the step is short: she begins to inquire and armed with an iPad and a stylus begins to create her style and his artistic vision.


    To date, her success in the Crypto world seems to have far surpassed that in traditional art perhaps because, as she herself says, “I learned from my surroundings and then I started modeling my images. I really like it. realistic art and that’s what I’m focusing on ”.

    CryptoYuna thus began to sell her works on different online platforms where she met other artists such as Stellabelle, Lapin Mignon, Ann Ahoy, hairofmedusa … It was therefore natural for them to get together and create the first all-female NFT exhibition thanks also to the support of Darren Cullen, founder of the Graffiti King street art team, who said: “We wouldn’t be Kings without our Queens!”

    Open from 3 April, the exhibition can be visited online at 100, 150 in Vegas City on Decentraland.

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – 6 APRIL 2021

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – 6 APRIL 2021

    Every day, Art Rights Magazine selects the best news from the world of digital art, to stay up to date!

    1) 3 giants of the art market united to sell Urs Fischer’s first NFT works 

    After the millionaire sale of Beeple and the NFT releases by artists such as Damien Hirst, the Swiss Urs Fischer is also ready to enter the world of Crypto Art through a collaboration with three of the greatest realities in the art market: Fair Warning, l online auction app founded by former Christie’s specialist Loic Gouzer, the Pace Gallery and the Crypto Art Markers Place sales platform.

    Fischer will create a series of 501 NFT pieces, entitled “Chaos”: the first 500 will see the interaction of two totally foreign objects (such as an egg and a lighter), while the last will be a work that will collect together the 1000 objects used previously.

     

    2) John Gerrard lands in the world of NFT

    Irish artist John Gerrard has also dived into the NFT world with a new work!

    “Western Flag” comes from a 2017 work, a collection of clips and frames then commissioned by the British TV channel Channel 4 on the occasion of Earth Day. The work has a minimum selling price of 250 ETH, approximately $ 494,000.

    Gerrard stated that half of the proceeds will go to Regenerate.far, an emergency crypto fund dedicated to soil regeneration in Ireland, a country where the artist still lives

    3) Physical works and NFT in the new exhibition by artist Simon Denny

    The artist Simon Denny, to accompany his new exhibition entitled “Mine” at the Petzel Gallery in Chelsea, presented a series of NFT works.

    The NFT pieces explore and deepen the themes already covered by the works on display in the gallery such as the environmental impact of data networks such as Ethereum and Bitcoin. The first NFT work sold on opening night for 28.0 ETH or $ 49,642. 

    Photo Credits: Urs Fischer – Chaos #1. Image courtesy Urs Fischer.COURTESY FAIR WARNING

    LE NEWS DAL MONDO DIGITAL E NFT – 2 APRILE 2021

    NEWS FROM THE DIGITAL AND NFT WORLD – APRIL 2, 2021

    Every day, Art Rights Magazine selects the best news from the world of digital art, to stay up to date!

    1) Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi, the world’s most expensive work of art, will be turned into an NFT

    Crypto Leonardo, pseudonym of Ben Lewis, is the art historian who decided to turn Leonardo da Vinci’s famous Salvator Mundi, one of the most expensive works of art in the world, into NFT.

    The reason? The author wants to highlight the “age-old injustices” of the art world.

    Leonardo’s original painting, before being sold by Christie’s in 2017 for $450 million, was in the possession of a Louisiana sheet metal company, which, unaware of its value, sold it for $10,000 to Old Master dealers.

    My target price is $450 million in Ethereum,” Lewis says, “If it doesn’t sell, I want to at least draw attention to the insane excesses and injustices of the art market where families, who are unaware of the complexities of the art market, sell heirlooms for small change and receive no resale commissions.

    The “Salvator Metaversi” has a peculiar feature, which differentiates it from the original painting: the Salvator Mundi’s left hand clutches a fistful of dollars. The work can be found on the sales platform Opensea

    2) SIAE represents the rights of authors with digital assetsi

    The Società Italiana degli Autori ed Editori (SIAE), the copyright collection agency founded in 1882, has reached an important milestone in the project carried out in collaboration with the Algorand platform

    For the first time, copyrights are represented as digital assets: more than 4 million NFTs have been created on the platform, and will be used to represent the rights of the more than 95,000 authors who are members of SIAE. 

    ” SIAE has created an ambitious project, where transparency and simplicity in data management are becoming a new reality for their industry,” said Turing Prize-winning MIT professor Silvio Micali, founder of Algorand. 

    3) @obeygiaant launches Obey Ideal Power mural, an NFT work of social denunciation  

    The American artist Shepard Fairey, known by his stage name Obey, is the internationally renowned street artist and illustrator who has recently created a work in NFT of denunciation, entitled Obey Ideal Power Mural. The work explores social issues directly involving the viewer, making him reflect on the negative impacts and social benefits – environmental of different forms of power.

    Shepard Fairey has stated that 25% of the proceeds (or a minimum of $25,000) will be donated to Amnesty International, to support human rights.