🍪 En cliquant "Ok", vous acceptez le stockage de cookies sur votre appareil afin d'améliorer la navigation sur le site, d'analyser l'utilisation du site et de nous aider dans nos efforts de marketing.
Hey everybody, Twangy here. I just want to promote A Hall Sniffs Glue, a local artist from Miami, Florida who started a project known as Geographies of Trash, and essentially he paints on trash, takes a picture of the trash that is a NFT aspect of the trash, and the physical aspect of the trash has its own value. And there's a lot of collectors here in Miami, and it'd be cool to see this pop up in other cities. You can click the link and learn more about it, and thanks for supporting.
How are we, Toanji? I mean, how good is graffiti and street art, right? I mean, how colorful they give the neighborhoods, the cities and everything. And there is one thing that is also stylized, that I don't know if it's graffiti as such, right? But what are, for example, the trampantojos. There are painters who, maybe on a wall, make the drawing as if it were a balcony, or a dog, some horses and so on, right? As if the illusion of the eye seems to be a landscape. And that is also another type of art that I like a lot. Nothing, I send you a greeting.
Yes, I saw that a lot in Europe, because you have more bricks in the old roads, so it's easier to make art like that, but also in the more modern concretes, but it's an art style of illusion that I love too, it's great.
So this was actually pretty dope. I like the idea and I'll be perfectly honest I still to this day this very second actually do not understand how NFTs work. If anybody would like to just hit my inbox and maybe try and explain it to me, I'm here to hear it but yeah this is dope.
Yeah, Geographies of Trash is a very innovative program. Other artists should try to recreate the concept. I think it bridges the world of NFT and physical art in a good way too.