Daily Trust Sunday

Nigerian artists bank on crypto-art

-

man has become the most famous African crypto-artist.

He was already using Microsoft Word to paint when he was at university, but “gallerists didn’t care about digital art” until recently, he told Agence France-Presse.

It was in 2017 that he discovered he could sell his artwork directly to buyers using a blockchain — where a record of NFT ownership can be stored.

In the past six months, as cryptocurr­encies and NFTs have boomed, digital art like Osinachi’s has thrived.

“Now, galleries are after him,” said Oyindamola Fakeye, creative director at the Centre for Contempora­ry Art in the country’s cultural capital Lagos. “He has a very positive influence on other African digital artists.”

Blockchain, cryptocurr­ency and NFTs are terms that are no longer foreign to Osinachi, who spends a lot of time in person and online explaining what they are to other artists. Many creative minds and entreprene­urs in Nigeria are inspired by his success.

It’s a “revolution in the art space,” said fellow crypto-artist Niyi Okeowo, whose afro-futurist work combines photograph­y, 3D and graphic design. Nigeria has about “a hundred” digital artists, Okeowo says, and “most have been inspired by Osinachi.”

With its large, youthful, creative and connected population, the West African nation has “the potential to lead” when it comes to NFTs, Osinachi believes.

“We have plenty of talents here. The creative energy in Lagos alone is baffling among young people,” Osinachi said.

Nigerians are also fond of cryptocurr­encies, contributi­ng to the success of NFTs.

In times of economic crisis, with a devalued naira, a growing number in the country are choosing to invest in digital currency. Last year, more

With its large, youthful, creative and connected population, the West African nation has “the potential to lead” when it comes to NFTs, Osinachi believes. than US$400m were exchanged in cryptos, making Nigeria the third-largest user of digital money worldwide, behind the US and Russia, according to Statista, a German company specializi­ng in market and consumer data.

Entreprene­ur Uyi Omokaro was an early believer in the potential of NFT in Nigeria. This month, he launched Wearmaster­s, a platform to sell Africa-made NFT art, where he hopes to bring on some of Nigeria’s most talented emerging artists like 23-year-old painter Daniel Pengrapher.

“Our ambition is to give them internatio­nal visibility through NFT,” Pengrapher said.

For now, NFT collectors are few in the country. One of them is Michael Ugwu, director of a digital studio in Lagos.

“I’m one of the only ones,” Ugwu said.

He started investing in cryptocurr­encies in 2017, after several devaluatio­ns of the naira, before discoverin­g his real passion: the crypto-art market.

“The traditiona­l art space can be a little bit snobbish,” Ugwu said.

On the crypto-art market, he says he “found a community, so welcoming, so interactiv­e.”

He owns about “a hundred” NFTs he says proudly, but he also considers them investment­s.

Ugwu has used NFTs as insurance to obtain loans on the crypto-finance market, a process that would take months in the traditiona­l banking system.

Ugwu remains confident, despite recent crypto crashes that automatica­lly devalue his collection­s. “Most of my friends think that I’m crazy... Let’s wait and see in 10 years.”

 ??  ?? Prince Jacon Osinachi
Prince Jacon Osinachi
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria