Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.

Damien Hirst burns his artworks that have NFT's

2»

Comments

  • Off_it said:
    The funniest thing about that is that he produced 10,000 pieces of unique art. Presumably one dot was a different colour in each one. Hilarious.
    I knew one of the people who painted his ‘dot’ paintings, (Lauren Child, author of the Charlie and Lola books). 
    There was a team of them, and each one had their own trademark colour dot in the top right hand corner of the painting they worked on, so that they would know which one of them and actually painted it. Hirst didn’t paint any of them. 
  • seth plum said:
    So it is as simple as walking into a bank, handing over cash money across the counter and saying ‘transfer that to ftx’.
    Then what?
    Have you never used the internet before? Or purchased anything on it? This is the same process. You create an ftx account, buy ETH on it with your debit card. Then you can do what you want with the ETH - transfer to your own web3 wallet so you can use it on dAPPS
  • Have you never used the internet before? Or purchased anything on it? This is the same process. You create an ftx account, buy ETH on it with your debit card. Then you can do what you want with the ETH - transfer to your own web3 wallet so you can use it on dAPPS
    Right.
    So I go on to the internet.
    Look up ftx.
    Sign up to whatever they are giving name, address, dob, email and create a password, and they say ‘you’re in, you have signed up to something and it is completely free of charge, here is your membership number’.
    Then I walk into the bank with my cash money pass it across the counter and say ‘errrrm, put my money into ftx, here is my membership number’ and the bank does that.
    How do I then get my money back out?
  • WSS said:
    Seth, I appreciate you don't understand Crypto (nor do I to a great deal), but you're not unintelligent so I'm not sure why you are (in my opinion) deliberately acting uber-ignorant. What are you hoping to achieve?

    In your example up there, do you sign up for Amazon and then go to your bank with your login details,give them cash and expect them to make purchases on your behalf?

    Come on, it's ludicrously tedious.
    I was mocked in the second post on this thread so I have responded.
  • seth plum said:
    I was mocked in the second post on this thread so I have responded.
    so this "post" where is it? For the man on the street right now, where can he get this "post"?
  • This is certainly an interesting thread.

    Who will crack first and go all Guns of the Navarone?!
  • I wish the NFT market was as predictable as this website. I would be a millionaire.
    So would everyone else when you play the victim card.  It will be before page 5 of this thread.
  • edited October 2022
    Damien Hirst looking for another payday using a blunt instrument that was crass 20 years ago when used by The KLF. Out of fashion wealthy rebel shows disdain for establishment bollocks.
  • Sponsored links:


  • JamesSeed said:
    I knew one of the people who painted his ‘dot’ paintings, (Lauren Child, author of the Charlie and Lola books). 
    There was a team of them, and each one had their own trademark colour dot in the top right hand corner of the painting they worked on, so that they would know which one of them and actually painted it. Hirst didn’t paint any of them. 
    Common practise at a certain level. I'm currently in Saudi Arabia painting murals, there's another artist represented here called Philip Colbert (the British Warhol is what some ppl call him). He isn't actually here, 2 assistants are, he has 2 studios with 40 staff who design and paint his work in London. He just signs them and charges 30k +....the staff get a day rate. I've just earned the most I've ever got on a single job... including business class flights the lot. They are getting paid P/H and travelled standard.  

    Tbh, that's traditionally how most artists learned the skills they put inton there own practise... its pretty much an apprenticeship. 
  • shine166 said:
    Common practise at a certain level. I'm currently in Saudi Arabia painting murals, there's another artist represented here called Philip Colbert (the British Warhol is what some ppl call him). He isn't actually here, 2 assistants are, he has 2 studios with 40 staff who design and paint his work in London. He just signs them and charges 30k +....the staff get a day rate. I've just earned the most I've ever got on a single job... including business class flights the lot. They are getting paid P/H and travelled standard.  

    Tbh, that's traditionally how most artists learned the skills they put inton there own practise... its pretty much an apprenticeship. 
    Hmmm. That's not right though, is it? 

    I mean, if you lump out £30k for someone's art then the expectation is that they've done more than just sign the thing, surely?
  • edited October 2022
    Off_it said:
    Hmmm. That's not right though, is it? 

    I mean, if you lump out £30k for someone's art then the expectation is that they've done more than just sign the thing, surely?
    That's fair, but if you go to a restaurant and pay top dollar for Hestons food... the chances he's cooked it are all but none. Even Banksy is one man with a team.

    If you purchased the Hirst NFT for $2000 and swapped it for the assistant made original... it'd be worth $15000 now (last time I looked) so the investment was a good one...
     and for most people spending that kind of money, it is an investment.
  • shine166 said:
    That's fair, but if you go to a restaurant and pay top dollar for Hestons food... the chances he's cooked it are all but none. Even Banksy is one man with a team.

    If you purchased the Hirst NFT for $2000 and swapped it for the assistant made original... it'd be worth $15000 now (last time I looked) so the investment was a good one...
     and for most people spending that kind of money, it is an investment.
    Yeah, I get the similarities, but I reckon most people will know that Heston isn't there out the back cooking all the dishes all night every night, but he will have set the standards and created the menu, etc.

    When it comes to art I would've thought that if you're buying a Hirst, or a Turner, Picasso, Da Vinci, etc - then the expectation is that the artist will have done a bit more than just sign it. 

    But hey ho, it's all academic for me anyway. I'm happy with my print of the The Fighting Temeraire on the wall that only cost a score!
  • i mean, i've explained what each of these are later on in the post. But Ethereum is a name of the network, proof of stake is a way of approving transactions on the network. Blockchain is the technology and concept. 

    If you want to use the ethereum network, you have to make a transaction - which costs you "gas" fees which are then distributed to those that maintain the network. 
    I really do not understand. I am not being awkward KA. I do not get it at all. I realise it is all but impossible for people who understand to explain it to those that don't without using jargon, like trying to explain cricket to yanks. 

    Taking it back, am I right in thinking Hirst has sold artworks that only the buyer can access on his/her computer?
     
  • edited October 2022
    The world has gone crazy
  • Well, I'm astonished that artists don't actually do their own painting anymore.

  • I really do not understand. I am not being awkward KA. I do not get it at all. I realise it is all but impossible for people who understand to explain it to those that don't without using jargon, like trying to explain cricket to yanks. 

    Taking it back, am I right in thinking Hirst has sold artworks that only the buyer can access on his/her computer?
     
    Anyone able to help me here? 
  • I wonder how the NFTers feel a year on, seeing as 95% of all NFTs are currently valued as "completely worthless"
Sign In or Register to comment.

Roland Out Forever!