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NFT Megastar Beeple Debuts $15M Physical Statue That’ll Keep Evolving After Sale
By Mikelle Leow, 29 Oct 2021
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Image via Christie’s
Digital artist Beeple’s art transforms every day. Prior to the eye-watering US$69 million sale at auction house Christie’s that inspired the world’s obsession with non-fungible tokens (NFTs), he was most known for creating a new digital illustration daily, and maintaining that streak for over a decade. It was the first set of 5,000 daily graphics he worked on that was compiled and turned into the most expensive NFT yet, catapulting Beeple into the ranks of artists like Jeff Koons, David Hockney, and Frida Kahlo.
And now, his life-changing ties with the auction house are coming full circle. Beeple, whose real name is Mike Winkelmann, is returning to Christie’s with another original work for the 21st-century evening sale on November 9.
Given his repute as a digital artist, it’d be a surprise for many that the latest piece is a physical one. But mind you, this is still a Beeple work—the sculpture, entitled Human One (2021), is a moving hybrid artwork with digital, physical, and, of course, NFT aspects. The artwork is anticipated to rake in US$15 million.
The sculpture is a seven-foot-tall box covered in LED displays of 24-hour video to make it look like a life-size astronaut is walking around dystopian lands. The character also interestingly “turns” to whichever angle the sculpture is facing.
Harking back to Beeple’s rise into becoming a household name, the sale includes an NFT. Noah Davis, head of digital sales at Christie’s, told ARTnews that the unique contract in the digital asset means that, even after its sale, the sculpture can still be modified by Beeple from afar. “Mike can change the art remotely forever—he could decide to shut it down, destroy it.”
The buyer should keep in mind that the artwork could evolve as and when Beeple feels like it. Novelty, along with the possibility of the piece no longer blending as well into a room, would have to be a drawing point.
“The collector will have to be OK with the work changing, because there’s very little chance that [Winkelmann] won’t take the opportunity to surprise the collector with new work,” Davis emphasized.
Beeple was pleased to be able to work with both physical and digital materials for the project. “While a traditional work of art is more akin to a finite statement, frozen in time at the moment it was completed, this artwork’s unique ability to be updated makes it more akin to an ongoing conversation,” he expressed.
[via ARTnews, images via Christie’s]
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