The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Damien Hirst’s NFTs: posing a burning question

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Questions about the nature and value of art are not new: a century has passed since Marcel Duchamp turned a urinal upside down, signed it R Mutt and presented it as Fountain to the Society of Independen­t Artists, in response to its promise that it would accept any work of art so long as the artist paid the applicatio­n fee.

New times need new questions, and one was flamboyant­ly posed last week by the artist Damien Hirst, when he started to burn hundreds of his own spot paintings after offering buyers the choice of purchasing them as original artworks or as £2,000 non-fungible tokens (NFTs). To destroy the originals where buyers chose NFTs has a certain logic; the issue is whether this amounts to more than selling a title deed and bulldozing the house.

The showmanshi­p of Hirst might appear to have little in common with another recent transactio­n: the $100m sale of the UK-based Secret Cinema to an American digital ticketing firm. However, there are similariti­es. Secret Cinema is an immersive experience that repackages cult films and television series as a live experience, recreating worlds from Dirty Dancing to Bridgerton for fans prepared to pay up to £139 a ticket for a glorified fancy dress party with themed cocktails. Just as Hirst’s NFTs are an untried commodity, the TodayTix Group has paid top dollar for a business that has been running for 15 years but has yet to turn a profit. Both are playing the futures market, with no guarantee that it will pay out. The more interestin­g question, however, is whether posterity will judge either to have any lasting cultural value beyond the opportunit­y to boast about owning a theoretica­l Hirst, or to post an Instagram selfie.

Secret Cinema at least employs actors and even scriptwrit­ers to craft bespoke scenes for revellers to discover as they mingle with their favourite characters. The same cannot be said of immersive art exhibition­s, such as the Van Gogh experience. Its London incarnatio­n promises a 360-degree light and sound spectacula­r featuring some of his most famous works, with an animated simulation of his brushstrok­es. In Dubai, visitors were invited to pose beneath a sign reading “Here, Best Selfie Ever”. What is missing are original paintings.

There is a difference between these exercises in marketing and repackagin­g, and artist-led immersive works such as Punchdrunk’s The Burnt City, a theatrical reimaginin­g of the siege of Troy, which involves an old-fashioned contract between artist and viewer – one makes work for the other to experience.

But one should not assume that different sorts of contracts will not catch on, at a time when so much is changing, technologi­cally, economical­ly and culturally. In 1917, another moment of convulsive change, Duchamp’s Fountain was rejected as a joke. It was a joke, but it was also the future. Today there are many Fountains, though the original urinal was lost long ago. It’s a precedent we’d be foolish to ignore.

 ?? Photograph: Jeff Spicer/Getty Images ?? Damien Hirst burns some of his artworks in London.
Photograph: Jeff Spicer/Getty Images Damien Hirst burns some of his artworks in London.

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