After several years of development, Syndicate Art is finally ready to launch its NFT art marketplace. Central to the launch are the three artists Engwind, Slava Nemes and AFK, but also a Zyrus Lamborghini that is for sale both as an NFT and as a real car. In connection with the launch, Kaupr has videointerviewed Arne Beck, who is behind the project together with Jens Morten Viktil.
“Art must be potent, it must be something with power within, it must say something, it must come from the depths of man and humanity, from the heart, from the emotional”. This is one of Beck's statements in which we talk both about the meeting of the physical and the digital, about NFT art and the history of art, about the relationship between culture and money, about what Syndicate Art is and about what is unique about the new marketplace, which is built on Concordium.
These are among the topics we've covered in our conversation with Beck.
00:49 Introduction and welcome to Arne Beck from Syndicate Art
01:36 NFT art has been declared dead and buried. Is that right?
02:34 What are NFTs and what is happening in the NFT market?
03:36 What is real and what is illegitimate?
05:37 Web3 and ownership of information
06:24 What is Syndicate Art and what do you offer?
07:45 A multi-audience platform
09:13 How did art and storytelling start?
10:04 The artists involved. Slava Nemes, AFK and Engwind
12:26 Syndicate Art as a curated platform for human art
13:43 Will the platform be open to anyone who wants to create NFT art?
14:43 AI based art and photo art
16:00 What is phygital? Combination of digital and physical life
18:31 Can the Lamborghini be bought? Both with fiat and crypto?
20:00 Money and speculation more important than art itself?
23:24 The cultural universe of the future; internet and gaming
25.19 Syndicate Art built at Concordium. Why?
28:26 On which platforms are the NFTs minted?
29:49 Who is behind Syndicate Art on the ownership side?
31:32 Could there also be a Syndicate token coming?
33:03 What does it take for a user to gain access?
34:17 Why is this a paradigm shift?
After several years of development, Syndicate Art is finally ready to launch its NFT art marketplace. Central to the launch are the three artists Engwind, Slava Nemes and AFK, but also a Zyrus Lamborghini that is for sale both as an NFT and as a real car. In connection with the launch, Kaupr has videointerviewed Arne Beck, who is behind the project together with Jens Morten Viktil.
“Art must be potent, it must be something with power within, it must say something, it must come from the depths of man and humanity, from the heart, from the emotional”. This is one of Beck's statements in which we talk both about the meeting of the physical and the digital, about NFT art and the history of art, about the relationship between culture and money, about what Syndicate Art is and about what is unique about the new marketplace, which is built on Concordium.
These are among the topics we've covered in our conversation with Beck.
00:49 Introduction and welcome to Arne Beck from Syndicate Art
01:36 NFT art has been declared dead and buried. Is that right?
02:34 What are NFTs and what is happening in the NFT market?
03:36 What is real and what is illegitimate?
05:37 Web3 and ownership of information
06:24 What is Syndicate Art and what do you offer?
07:45 A multi-audience platform
09:13 How did art and storytelling start?
10:04 The artists involved. Slava Nemes, AFK and Engwind
12:26 Syndicate Art as a curated platform for human art
13:43 Will the platform be open to anyone who wants to create NFT art?
14:43 AI based art and photo art
16:00 What is phygital? Combination of digital and physical life
18:31 Can the Lamborghini be bought? Both with fiat and crypto?
20:00 Money and speculation more important than art itself?
23:24 The cultural universe of the future; internet and gaming
25.19 Syndicate Art built at Concordium. Why?
28:26 On which platforms are the NFTs minted?
29:49 Who is behind Syndicate Art on the ownership side?
31:32 Could there also be a Syndicate token coming?
33:03 What does it take for a user to gain access?
34:17 Why is this a paradigm shift?