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A high-profile collaboration between DC comic artist Jose Delbo and crypto artist Trevor Jones will see the launch of previously unseen crypto art later this week. The collab comes as a frenzy for collecting non-fungible tokens (NFT) art catches on in the broader cryptocurrency market—with investors picking up NFTs for tens of thousands of dollars.
Delbo is famous for his work on ‘Wonder Woman’ for international comics brand DC Comics and on the ‘Transformers’ series for Marvel Comics, among other artworks, and he expects digital art to pick up in a big way in the coming years.
Delbo told Decrypt, “More and more it feels like the future is digital and while I believe there will always be a sure place for physical art, I have really been enjoying creating digital art for this space.”
A preview image released by Delbo ahead of the upcoming collaboration. Image: Jose Delbo.
The Thursday release will feature Batman, one of the world’s most popular fictional characters, portrayed in multiple ways. The collaboration consists of four artworks in total—two animations and two illustrations/paintings—and will be sold on crypto art website MakersPlace.
NFTs allow a digital asset to be represented with a single token on the blockchain. They aren’t divisible unlike cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, and hence provide a mark of verifiable ownership and scarcity for holders.
In contrast, Jones represents an upcoming breed of “crypto artists,” who exclusively merge art and technology and put their artwork on blockchain tokens instead of traditional canvasses.
The batman symbol. Image: Shutterstock.
“Galleries and artists everywhere are struggling terribly with the canceling of exhibitions and art fairs but it’s true that in times of crisis people turn to the arts for respite so now the art-loving tech-savvy are getting their fill of art via NFT marketplaces,” Jones told Decrypt.
Delbo and Jones have, independently, sold their digital art for amounts ranging from 20 ETH to over 150 ETH ($7,400 to $58,000), with their upcoming collab expected to see a higher value as part of the auction on Thursday.
Art on NFTs has picked up in a big way. And while dedicated market places like OpenSea, Rarible, and MakersPlace can be mere digital art galleries for a casual observer, they are heralded as the future of art by cyberpunks.
It’s not obscure websites picking up such crypto art either. Last week, famed auction house Christie's auctioned a Bitcoin-themed painting for over $130,000, with buyers receiving a real-life painting of Bitcoin’s original code and an NFT that stamped their ownership and other relevant information on the blockchain.
Just last month, crypto research firm Delphi Digital purchased five Ethereum NFTs for over $162,000 on the blockchain game Axie Infinity—seeing them as investments.
As per Jones, such NFT offerings can be expected to gain further traction. “The art colleges and artists, commercial galleries, and auction houses that don’t adapt to the new ways of creating, selling, investing in, and displaying art will eventually become obsolete,” he told Decrypt.
The collaboration highlights the growth of the niche crypto art industry, and the possibilities for artists across the globe to seamlessly collaborate with art veterans.
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