The World of Chinese

Can NFT art flourish in China?

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By day, Eminem Guo is a worker at a state-owned enterprise in Shenzhen. But after hours, he’s selling on a black market. Together with other anonymous Chinese internet users, “Kelly” and “Marktim,” they set up “Tiger Club,” an account selling digital art as Non-fungible Tokens

(NFTS) on sales platform Opensea.

Although technicall­y banned in China, there is huge interest in the country over NFTS: Chinese servers dominated global Google searches on NFTS in 2021 according to Google Trends.

Some are tapping into the action covertly, seeking untold riches potentiall­y just a VPN away.

NFTS are a complicate­d subject— in a nutshell, they are usually a digital image that is assigned value by being unique. They can be traded digitally, as long as they are attached to a cryptocurr­ency, like Ethereum (ETH) or Bitcoin, which keep records of all exchanges to guarantee against fraud or forgery.

But although there are many applicatio­ns for NFTS, they are mostly associated with expensive digital artwork, both in China and globally. This can largely be ascribed to the jaw-dropping 69 million US dollars price set at Christie’s auction last year for an NFT titled Everydays: The First 5000 Days by digital artist Beeple, as well as the nearly ubiquitous collection of “Bored Ape” and “Cryptopunk” avatars, which have fetched astronomic­al sums as more and more celebritie­s buy and use them as profile pictures.

Guo (who did not want to share his real name with TWOC) bought his first NFT in December 2020, but was inspired to get involved with creating and selling them when one of his favorite actors, Shawn Yue, sold his profile picture on social media as an NFT for over 5.9 million US dollars at a Christie’s auction in Hong Kong in September 2021.

The Tiger Club NFTS are anime portraits of an exasperate­dlooking tiger. These cartoon portraits of animals, each only slightly unique in color, character, and style from

one another, echo famous NFT collection­s from the West.

That's not accidental. Like many other young Chinese creators, Guo and his cohort are influenced by “the fashion of the times,” as he claims, and have chosen to emulate this by outfitting their tigers with a variety of upto-date outfits, hats, glasses, necklaces, and other mix-andmatch accessorie­s, which they manually paint on their computer before uploading to Opensea. That means they only have 26 images on their account, whereas their inspiratio­ns, the Bored Ape Yacht Club and Cryptopunk­s, use AI to create tens of thousands.

Although the aesthetic of

Tiger Club may not be totally original, they've still made Guo a millionair­e—sort of. The money he has made is illegal in China:

The People's Bank of China outlawed domestic trading of cryptocurr­encies in 2017 due to the risks of rampant speculatio­n and the lack of centralize­d control. Chinese traders could still trade on foreign platforms until the NFT boom last year spooked regulators.

In October 2021, at a convention on NFTS, three of China's largest internet companies (Alibaba's

Ant Group, Tencent, and Jd.com) reaffirmed their commitment to keep NFTS away from cryptocurr­ency by linking them to the yuan. This allows them to continue trading NFTS, referred to as “digital collectibl­es.”

The trade in digital collectibl­es in China is now more centralize­d. To trade on Chinese e-commerce or blockchain platforms, users must upload their phone and ID number, and only pay in yuan.

They cannot exchange or resell for 180 days after purchasing, to curb speculatio­n.

Guo views the measures as ineffectiv­e for those who are already involved in NFT trading, as he has sold two of his works for 36 ETH each (about 1.2 million yuan at the time of writing). “If you really want to sell you can do an underhand trade,” he says. He thinks the regulation­s are "pointless," as all they do is force creators to keep their digital assets online when it could be circulated back into China.

This also prevents potential artists from sharing their work with domestic audiences when there's much more money to be made elsewhere. “Of course, I would rather sell my artwork in China. I actually believe the entreprene­urial environmen­t and potential for artists is somewhat better here,” Guo claims. He suggests China needs its own version of Opensea, with more freedom to buy and sell. “Then we can move forward as artists.”

But regulation­s haven't deterred others: 27-year-old freelance artist Song Ting has attracted attention with her psychedeli­c digital collectibl­es based on traditiona­l Chinese artwork like the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang, Gansu province. In the past year, she has partnered with Tencent and KFC, and seen one piece sell for 667,000 yuan. The system will likely encourage those who work within it.

Full disclosure: Rory Mencin is an art curator sourcing Chinese NFT artists for the internatio­nal market.

 ?? ?? A crypto art exhibition entitled “Virtual Niche: Have You Ever Seen Memes in the Mirror?” in Beijing’s UCCA Center for Contempora­ry Art in 2021
A crypto art exhibition entitled “Virtual Niche: Have You Ever Seen Memes in the Mirror?” in Beijing’s UCCA Center for Contempora­ry Art in 2021
 ?? ?? “Crypto Shadow Play,” an interactiv­e work combining traditiona­l art,
AR, and crypto technology caught viewers' attention at an art exhibition in Wuhan in 2021
“Crypto Shadow Play,” an interactiv­e work combining traditiona­l art, AR, and crypto technology caught viewers' attention at an art exhibition in Wuhan in 2021

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