‘She Will’ Director Launches NFT in Support of End Violence Against Women

Based on her film "She Will," Charlotte Colbert’s NFT will appear as part of an exhibition by female artists, with the proceeds going to charity.

By Stephen Graves

2 min read

Artist and filmmaker Charlotte Colbert is launching a 1-of-1 NFT based on her horror film “She Will,” with the proceeds of the sale going to support the charity End Violence Against Women.

The NFT, titled "Why are we taught to fear the witches?" depicts the film’s star Alice Krige in a short video that draws on the film's folk-horror aesthetic.

In the psychological horror film, Krige plays former film star Veronica Ghent, who visits a healing retreat in Scotland to recover from a double mastectomy. While there, she’s haunted by visions of witches who were burnt on the site centuries earlier and receives the power to exact revenge for past traumas within her dreams.

The full version of Colbert's NFT is animated. Image: Charlotte Colbert

Colbert’s NFT is launching as part of Goddess, an NFT show by online gallery Eye of the Huntress in collaboration with NFT marketplace SuperRare

The show presents the work of nine female artists from around the world; appearing alongside Colbert in the exhibition are Meta Angels creators Aslan Ruby, Eyes of Fashion creator Talia Zoref, and artists Varvara Alay, Lizzy Aroloye, Dayoung Kim, Misha Milovanovich, Laura Shepherd and Kate Daudy.

The show aims to address the gender imbalance in the digital art space; according to a November 2021 report by ArtTactic, women made up just 16% of primary and secondary sales on the NFT marketplace Nifty Gateway over the preceding 21 months.

NFTs and film

Colbert follows in the footsteps of several filmmakers who’ve made inroads into the NFT space. In the last year alone, the likes of Spike Lee, Kevin Smith, and Quentin Tarantino have all launched NFT projects. 

Meanwhile, independent filmmakers have seized on NFT sales as a means of funding projects.

This week, indie film Calladita went before the cameras; the film was funded with NFT sales, including a novel partnership with NFT collection Nouns.

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