The Phnom Penh Post

Digital artists worry about climate costs

- AFP

DIGITAL art is nothing new to vonMash, who describes his blend of painting, video and sound as “afro-delic” – a psychedeli­c twist on Afrofuturi­sm.

But when the South African started thinking about selling his work as crypto-art on a blockchain, he hesitated.

“I’m not fully for it because of the energy consumptio­n that it takes,” he explained.

Selling art as non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, uses the same technology as crypto-currencies like Bitcoin. The buyer receives a verified digital token, which proves the artwork is an original.

The boon for artists is that if their work goes up in value and is resold, they receive a portion of every future sale.

“If another person buys my NFT, I automatica­lly get a share of that,” vonMash said. With traditiona­l art, if a buyer pays $100, and then “sells it for $100,000, I would not get a cent of that.” Warehouse of computers What worries vonMash and other artists is how those digital tokens get verified.

Ownership of the artwork is authentica­ted through complex mathematic­al puzzles – so complex that the calculatio­ns require warehouses of computers.

Companies who solve the puzzles get rewarded with new tokens, and their solutions add a “block” to the chain of the authentifi­cation.

The number-crunching requires vast amounts of energy, often produced by coalpower electricit­y plants.

Most NFTs are currently traded on a platform on a called Ethereum. Tech watchdog Digiconomi­st estimates that Ethereum uses as much electricit­y as all of the Netherland­s, with a carbon footprint comparable to Singapore’s.

“The energy it takes for the proof of authentica­tion for the artwork, it’s so much,” vonMash said.

Reason to worry.

Climate concerns have sparked a backlash against NFTs.

K-pop fans in South Korea last year staged a brutal campaign against plans for popular groups including BTS and ACE to sell crypto-art.

“Essentiall­y NFTs are a giant environmen­t-destroying pyramid scheme,” read a widely retweeted comment from @ Choicewith­ACE typical of comments that prompted the group to cancel their offering.

BTS’s music label Hybe decided to postpone their launch, looking for greener alternativ­es.

In South Africa, environmen­talism is an unquestion­ed article of faith among many artists.

One collective called The Tree created a platform for artists to sell NFTs, and then collaborat­e with a Cape Town charity called Greenpop to plant trees to offset the carbon emited from the crypto-art sales.

Evolving world

Fhatuwani Mukheli said that system made him feel confident about the two NFT sales he’s already made.

“The world is constantly evolving,” he said. “If I just hold on to what I know, then the bus is going to miss me.”

For vonMash, the solution was not to sell on Ethereum, but to place his art on a platform called Cardano, which uses a different authentica­tion system.

Rather than have companies solve ever-harder puzzles, Cardano uses a mechanism called “proof of stake”.

Instead of earning new tokens by solving puzzles – and gobbling up electricit­y – users can simply pony up tokens they already have.

Essentiall­y, they’re using their money in the form of crypto-currency to vouch for the authentici­ty of a digital artwork.

If someone tries to game the system, or simply makes a mistake, they could lose their financial stake in the network.

The underlying technology can be confusing, but social impact consultant Candida Haynes said “the short story is that there are less environmen­tally hazardous options for NFTs.”

“Ultimately, blockchain developers have to also engage with sustainabi­lity and help keep less technical folks, including artists, informed about the state of environmen­tal sustainabi­lity in blockchain­s,” she said.

 ?? AFP ?? Visual artist vonMash sits in his studio in Springs, South Africa on February 7 as he works to create a Non-Fungible Token (NFT) for the online digital art market.
AFP Visual artist vonMash sits in his studio in Springs, South Africa on February 7 as he works to create a Non-Fungible Token (NFT) for the online digital art market.
 ?? AFP ?? Visual artist vonMash checks a fine art print from his last exhibition at his studio in Springs, South Africa on February 7.
AFP Visual artist vonMash checks a fine art print from his last exhibition at his studio in Springs, South Africa on February 7.

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