A non-fungible token (NFT) piece of art thirteen years in the making was just sold for a whopping USD 69.35m at famous British auction house Christie’s, becoming the most expensive NFT ever sold, and positioning the author among the top three most valuable living artists. (Updated at 15:27 UTC with the price realized. Updated at 15:49 UTC with more reactions.)
Titled ‘Everyday: The First 5000 Days’ and created by prominent digital artist Mike Winkelmann, known as Beeple, the piece was on online auction from February 25 until March 11, attracting 353 bids – with the highest one of USD 60.25m set to take it home. However, the final purchase price of a lot, which includes the hammer price with the buyer’s premium, or the price realized, hit USD 69.35m. Bidding opened at USD 100.
Just two hours before the end of the auction, there were 165 bids, and the highest bid was USD 13.25m. And then, the real race started:
- 20 minutes left: 171 bid and USD 14.75m.
- 10 minutes left: 193 bids and USD 20.25m.
- 5 minutes left: 211 bids and USD 24.75m.
- 1 minute left: 223 bids and 27.75m.
- Extended by 1 minute: 315 bids and USD 50.75m.
- The end of the auction: 353 bids and USD 60.25m
The auction house has enabled payment in ethereum (ETH) for this piece, stating that the payment must be made from a wallet maintained with Coinbase, Coinbase Custody Trust, Fidelity Digital Assets Services, Gemini Trust Company, or Paxos Trust Company.
Per the auction website, this unique NFT was minted on February 16, 2021. The lot essay states that in May 2007 Beeple decided to start creating and posting a new work of art online every day, thus creating a new digital picture every day for 5,000 days straight until January this year – showing the artist’s evolution over time.
“Individually known as EVERYDAYS, collectively, the pieces form the core of EVERYDAYS: THE FIRST 5000 DAYS,” it says. In it “the artist has stitched together recurring themes and color schemes to create an aesthetic whole. Organized in loose chronological order, zooming in on individual pieces reveals abstract, fantastical, grotesque, and absurd pictures, alongside current events and deeply personal moments.”
In recent years, Beeple often reacted to political events. “I almost look at it now like I’m a political cartoonist,” he said. “Except instead of doing sketches, I’m using the most advanced 3D tools to make comments on current events, almost in real-time.”
The South Carolina-based artist collaborated with major brands, such as Louis Vuitton, Apple, Space X, and Nike, as well as performing artists such as Imagine Dragons, Ariana Grande, Childish Gambino, and Katy Perry.
Nifty Gateway shows Beeple’s artwork sold out in December, two of which went to their new owner ‘pablo’ for USD 66,666.66 each. “Crossroad,” for example, is a token that changed based on the outcome of the US election. Many of the pieces have been resold for higher prices, earning the artist his share of the pie with each sale as well. For example, as reported, the Trump-themed work named “Crossroad” was resold on the secondary market for USD 6.6m.
“That was a real wake-up call for all of us […] to see such significant sums being paid,” Christie’s Noah Davis is quoted as saying by the New York Times.
Davis is also quoted by The Art Newspaper as saying that this auction and accepting payment in ETH are “the perfect opportunity to explore cryptocurrency because we have the perfect seller who is happy to receive payment in ETH.”
As reported in October last year, a bitcoin (BTC)-themed work named Block 21 fetched USD 131,250 at a Christie’s auction – seven times above their estimate. Block 21 was created by British artist Ben Gentilli who engraved it with 322,048 digits of original Bitcoin code.
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Reactions:
@subsidieland Wash-trading through Christie’s? They don’t even let you send ETH from a wallet, it has to come from… https://t.co/Uy98Lj9SFg
You are telling me that if I make a collage of 5000 random picture i can sell it for 60 million dollars? https://t.co/GOFPynhekv
@lopp Neither. As with any “branded” item, you’re not paying for the object itself, but for something else, usuall… https://t.co/fiSajAyxLR
When I see $60mm NFTs selling at auctions, $1 million #Bitcoin price doesn’t sound too crazy.
“When art, intellectual property and technology meet in a free market we are going to do that price discovery,” say… https://t.co/x4KNrL4pW0
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