You can read all about Pak, his exciting crypto-art concept The Fungibles Collection and the concept of A Cube in one of our latest articles here:
Marius Sperlich is a German artist working out of Berlin and has a large Instagram following, designed one of the Playboy covers in 2018 and participates in various art shows like 2019 Art Miami. He sets up body parts of models with make-up and miniature elements in a physical scene he photographs in close-up. Always looking for an original angle, a provoking image or message, his work leaves few people untouched.
The first pieces of his artwork in NFT form made quite a splash in the digital crypto art scene when released in March 2021. This specific limited 100 edition piece "You Only Loved Me When We Were High" is a reference to the popularity and heights crypto-currency reached beginning 2021. It compares our love for the space with a physical high, and leaves the question open on whether it is a bubble waiting to pop or it is "real love" after all.
Marius Sperlich's signature style of close-up body part photography with an intriguing and seductive twist is coming together in this NFT open edition artwork with the new hype of crypto-art.
The ecstasy tablet of which the artist produced a limited (fake) quantity has the Bitcoin logo on one side and the first 3 digits of Bitcoin's USD exchange rate at the time of production (48.2k USD / 1 BTC) on the other side. Coming together, they reflect another take of his "You only loved me when we were high" collection questioning if our love for crypto (art) is real or a fad.
This beautiful piece of rendered video art is part of the Infinite Sculptures open release in Jon Noorlander's Crypto Sculptures series. Jon is an accomplished Swedish multidisciplinary artist working in the creative field for over a decade and currently based in New York.
About the Series
Crypto Sculptures is my follow up series from my 2016 sculptures project. I always wanted to continue that work and have been waiting for the right opportunity and now that I entered the crypto art scene I found a perfect match. This collection consists of 21 loop-able animations, each with its own unique algorithmic setup to create complex structures within simplistic shapes (source).
The song Seven Nations Army by the iconic rock band The White Stripes is the sound of an entire generation and a well-known anthem chanted on festivals.
To honor the band, the Glitch Mob made an unofficial remix of their most popular song back in 2011 and has been gaining traction ever since with fans. It now is "officially" released by The White Stripes as part of their first NFT launch in a 6-piece open and limited edition series with video from Strangeloop Studios that fits seamlessly to the music.
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