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The Punk ®️
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The Punk ®️
@theSecretRealP1
🇬🇷punk9902
Lat: 39.3 Long:22.9 Katılım Mayıs 2021
3.9K Takip Edilen670 Takipçiler

🇩🇰🇬🇱🇺🇸⚡Massive protest in #Copenhagen
Thousands of Danes and #Greenlanders have filled City Hall Square to oppose President #Trump’s bid to take control of Greenland.
📍 Copenhagen
✊ Strong public resistance


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To people saying Bitcoin has no intrinsic value, a reminder that each Bitcoin represents ~1 GWh of energy transformed into digital scarcity, secured by code, halving every four years until 21M max supply. Good luck finding a better asset. cc: @Lagarde
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WHAT GIVES ART ITS VALUE?
I have been thinking about this question quite a lot recently. Why does some art merely please us while other art becomes priceless? A useful way to answer it is to separate the qualitative appeal of art from the financial mechanisms that allow that appeal to translate into market value. Art begins as perception and ends, sometimes, as capital. Between those two poles lie six conditions.
1. It is arresting to one or more of our senses
All art begins in attention. Something must first stop us: color, rhythm, sound, texture, form. The arresting quality of an artwork is what differentiates it from the noise of ordinary perception. A painting that catches light in an unfamiliar way, or a line of poetry that disrupts our habitual language, generates a moment of heightened presence. Without this sensory spark, no further meaning or value accumulates. The first condition is therefore physiological: the artwork must engage the body before the mind.
2. It touches upon or tells a compelling story
A work that merely dazzles fades quickly. For art to persist in consciousness, it must evoke or embed a narrative that invites interpretation or remembrance. This can be overt, like a myth retold, or abstract, like the implied struggle of brush and canvas. Narrative connects perception to emotion and memory; it allows the viewer to participate imaginatively in the work. Story gives art its mnemonic and symbolic power, ensuring that aesthetic experience is not fleeting but lived again in recollection.
3. It connects us to a community or identity
Art rarely exists in isolation. It signals belonging and difference. To admire a Rembrandt at the Norton, a Beeple on X, or a Sam Spratt “Skull” is also to place oneself within a tribe of connoisseurs, technologists, or believers in a cultural order. Art is thus a social technology: it binds individuals into communities of taste and belief. What we value in art often reflects what we value in ourselves. This third condition transforms private perception into shared meaning, a prerequisite for any broader recognition or market.
4. It is scarce
Here begins the passage from qualitative to financial value. Scarcity converts desire into economic tension. An infinite supply of beauty would be spiritually rich but commercially worthless. In traditional art, scarcity arises from the fact there may be only one original canvas. In digital or AI art, scarcity must be engineered through cryptographic uniqueness or limited editions. What matters is not absolute rarity but perceived exclusivity: the conviction that this instance cannot be casually replicated or replaced.
5. It can be owned
Scarcity alone does not create a market. There must be a means to claim and transfer the scarce thing. Ownership is the social recognition of possession; it enables price discovery, trade, and inheritance. The entire edifice of art’s financial value from Renaissance patronage to NFT blockchain depends on mechanisms that make ownership legible. Even when the art’s essence is intangible, its rights must be definable such as the right to a banana taped to a wall. This condition turns art from experience into asset.
6. It is known by others
The final catalyst is visibility. Art becomes valuable when its existence and ownership are known beyond the private sphere. Public awareness functions as a multiplier: it validates taste, attracts new interest, and creates the feedback loop of fame. In markets as in culture, attention compounds. The better known a work becomes, the more it is discussed, exhibited, and sought after. This reflexivity and network elevate the few from admired objects to cultural capital.
The Alchemy of Value
Art is not valuable because markets say so. Markets say so because art first satisfies deep human criteria for meaning, identity, and attention. When those meet the mechanics of scarcity, ownership, and recognition, perception hardens into price.
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@0xRodo How can I check ?? Just paste my address on check ?
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Trying something new with Meebs.
From now til Sep 7, holders can offer to trade multiple floors for some of the 800 awesome Meebs we hold in treasury. This allows us to lower the circulating supply while giving access to hard-to-collect traits that might never come to market. Lastly, this also lets us dogfood our current trading capabilities as we build out the new Meebits web portal.
Meebits@MeebitsNFTs
Introducing the MeebCo Upcycling Program ♻️ Every day until Sept 7, MeebCo will trade up to 1 Meebit from our vault for floor Meebits of comparable value, giving holders a chance to upcycle their collection! Full details in this article: x.com/MeebitsNFTs/st…
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Punks in Museums. ✔️
Punks Brunch in Museums. 🍻
Join us for special weekend celebrating the groundbreaking exhibition "Infinite Images: The Art of Algorithms” and the acquisition of CryptoPunk #9833 into @ToledoMuseum permanent collection.
Block Party Sat. Brunch Sun.
Supported by @gondixyz @nodefnd
RSVP in the Discord or Telegram.
GIF
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