What can I do in web3? Artists Room for all: examples of different web3 art

Room for all: examples of different web3 art

There is room for all in this next domain of web3. In this lesson, we'll walk you through a couple examples of pieces and end with some of the most expensive pieces to date.

First, we'll walk you through a couple types of web3 art then we'll discuss a bit of pieces that have sold at very high prices.

Example 1) Long Neckie Ladies is a collection started by 13-year-old Nyla Hayes that features an elongated neck inspired by Nyla’s favorite dinosaur, the brontosaurus.

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LongNeckieNylaArtExample.png

Example 2) Cosmic Garden, this individual piece is made by tiffatronn resembling a new land to explore.

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Screenshot 2023-04-04 7.50.44 AM.png

This piece is also a part of the World of Women Fund Collection that aims to inspire more artists to create and to champion artists in the space.

Example 3) And Finally, we have World of Women Galaxy, our second collection at World of Women. Also, a collection designed to inspire women from all walks of life to engage in the conversation around web3. These ladies (from our original collection) walked through a portal that enabled them to enter the Galaxy!

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Screenshot 2023-04-04 7.57.40 AM.png

There are so many different types of art, from 1:1 (one-of-one artwork) to entire collections (like World of Women) to domains, music nfts and more. Before we get into more, let’s look at the top five most-expensive pieces in the space so far:

1) The Merge is an NFT creation by digital artist Pak.

It was an Open Edition, meaning that buyers could buy as many NFTs as they wanted with a fixed price of $575 each (that would go up by $25 every six hours).

28,983 people bought 312,686 pieces for around $91 million in total.

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2) Everydays: The First 5000 Days, is a mosaic of 5000 digital images created by Mike Winkelmann, or Beeple as he is known on social media.

It sold for $69.3 million at Christie’s and is considered valuable because of the time and effort it took for Beeple to create each image.

The sale caught the attention of mainstream media, which led to many new people hearing about NFTs for the first time.

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3) Clock, by Julian Assange and Pak, was another top-selling NFT that sold for $52.7 million.

100% of the funds were put toward the legal defense of Julian Assange, who faces trial in the United States for 18 criminal charges.

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4) Human One, is an auctioned NFT with a physical, electronic piece created by Beeple.

It sold for $28.9 million as part of Christie’s 21st Century evening sale.

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5) CryptoPunk #5822 makes it on the list for selling for $23.7 million.

CryptoPunks are a collection of 10,000 pixel art NFTs and one of the first-ever NFT collections on the Ethereum blockchain.

CP #5822 is considered to be one of the rarest due to having a special character type: Alien Of the total 10,000 punks, only 9 have this Alien trait.

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Can you spot more? Tweet us some of your favorite NFT art at @WoWFoundation_ on Twitter, we'd love to see what you're learning!

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