Finally, a Good Use for NFTs: Preserving Street Art | WIRED
Even before technology became an intrinsic part of the art itself, it was a tool that artists depended on, from software to visualize and edit their works to projectors used to place it up on walls. Tech has also permeated street art's aesthetic. “Tech has influenced muralists' processes from imagination to implementation,” Wolfe-Goldsmith says. “We see design elements like glitches, pixelations, warping, chromatic aberration, and digital collage in today’s art. Street art is compelling because it’s for everyone, without barriers. It is the voice of the city, expressing political unrest, joy, cultural movements, and creative trends.” And yet, generating an income from it has remained a challenge. NFTs might be changing that. “NFTs allow artists to grow an international audience, be compensated, and find advocacy for their work,” says Joshi, bullish for what the near future might hold. “As people buy real estate in, say, Decentraland, I expect NFT street artists to find new opportunities as commissioned artists.” Artist and NFT Mural Collective founder Stacey Coon, aka StaySea, paints a mural that will eventually be minted on the blockchain. COURTESY OF LIZZY ABER/NFTMURAL COLLECTIVE Perhaps the best signifier of the potential of this market is the emergence of companies like Streeth, which is focused exclusively on minting street art NFTs. “Street art is perhaps the most undervalued and underserved niche in the art sector,” says cofounder and CEO Marco Calamassi, “but at the same time is the most creative, most disruptive one, where the artist has the most freedom of speech, the most freedom of message.” Streeth isn’t alone. NFT Mural Collective was created by street artists to support the genre in the NFT market. ”Street art deserves a place within art history just as much as Cubism, Dadaism, or Surrealism does,” says artist and founder Stacey Coon, aka StaySea, who started the group following the tagging and defacement of two of her murals. “NFT contracts and platforms give us a way to be those historians.” Minting an NFT can be a surprisingly simple process. In its most basic form, all it requires is that you have a crypto wallet and a digital version of your artwork. Most sites will walk you through the rest of the process, as NFT Mural Collective does, requiring you to fill out a form with a few details about the piece. You have more control and transparency in the sale of the piece than in many traditional settings, from choosing the initial price for the piece to deciding on the percentage of secondary sale royalties you will receive if the piece is resold, as well as choosing from an array of payment methods. Then, the platform takes over and mints the piece for you.