Will museums of the future just be giant NFT galleries?

Published at: Oct. 20, 2022

Museums, individuals and metaverse initiatives have used nonfungible tokens (NFTs) as a new means for reinventing themselves before their fans. The family of Frida Kahlo unveiled never-before-seen art and personal artifacts of the artist at an exclusive event in Decentraland for its art week in August.

In Belgium, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp became the first European museum to tokenize a classic art masterpiece worth millions of euros. The Kharkiv Art Museum in Ukraine launched a new NFT collection with Binance to preserve their cultural heritage and raise funds amid the ongoing regional conflict.

However, as everything becomes tokenized, questions arise. Will museums in the future just be giant NFT galleries with every piece of art having a digital counterpart? How does ownership really work in such a scenario?

Cointelegraph spoke with Hussein Hallak, founder and CEO of Momentable a company servicing museums to help with NFT integration, to understand what an NFT-ized future looks like for the art world.

Related: NFT pics are the funhouse mirror high-end art deserves

While digital art that is native to the Web3 space finds its place in virtual museums, traditional art and museums are taking on a layer of Web3. Thus, Hallak believes it's “inevitable” for museums to eventually transform into a giant NFT gallery. 

“We believe everything will be an NFT, just like a serial number, for every product there will be an NFT."

According to Hallak, it’s just a matter of technology becoming easier to use in order to become ubiquitous. For now he predicts the most common use of NFTs by museums should be for proof and maintenance of items in their collections, second would be digital editions accessible to the public. 

“NFTs are an integral tech innovation museums can’t afford to ignore if they want to step into the future," Hallak says. "But they needs to be part of a larger strategic modernization roadmap.”

When asked if fractional ownership diminishes the value of physical precious heirlooms held by museums Hallak says it's a fair question but the answer is no. Art just becomes more accessible.

He relates it to the value increase of a private company going public:

“Making art more accessible through fractionalized ownership or limited digital editions, will most likely drive interest, raise the appreciation of the art and artist and eventually increase its value.”

Ownership that comes with fracationalization is key to Web3. It is one of the defining characteristics, which differentiates it from the internet known before.

In the case of museums and the art up for NFT auction, is it really ownership if the art is still under some type of custodianship or is it perceived ownership?

Hallak perceives NFTs as a tool for supporting public art rather than a transfer of custodianship. 

“A more likely [NFT] model is funding a public display of artworks and artifacts by creating several digital versions.”

Over time NFTs will increasingly become an opportunity for museums to capitalize on their collections and curatorial prowess in a digitalize future, as seen with the aforementioned museum in Belgium. 

A recent report valued the NFT market to be worth nearly $231 billion by 2030.

Tags
Nft
Art
Related Posts
NFTs of empowered women aim to drive female engagement in crypto
The market for nonfungible token, or NFT, digital artwork is taking on the traditional art industry. Within the first six months of 2021, analytics firm DappRadar recorded $2.5 billion in NFT sales, showing a major increase from the $13.7 million in sales during the same time period in 2020. Christie's auction house reported $93.2 million in NFT sales during the first half of 2021. In addition to impressive sales, the NFT marketplace OpenSea, which reportedly hosts 98% of the entire market’s transactions, registered $4 billion in NFT trading volume during August this year. While the rise of blockchain-based digital artwork …
Adoption / Oct. 19, 2021
Royal House of Savoy NFTs to debut on the 150th anniversary of the Unification of Italy
Multimedia film director and artist Yi Zhou is set to mint the first-ever royal nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, based on the story of Italy's House of Savoy. The digital works are made in collaboration with the House of Savoy's (non reigning) descendent, Emanuele Filiberto di Savoia, Prince of Venice. The House of Savoy is known for playing a pivotal role in the Unification of Italy, or the "Risorgimento", over 150 years prior. Its then king, Victor Emmanuel II, acted as a symbol of the movement. Together with the Sardinia-Piedmont premier Camillo Benso, known as the Count of Cavour, revolutionary activist …
Adoption / Nov. 16, 2021
Adidas enters the Metaverse with NFT partnerships
On Thursday, Adidas announced it was entering the Metaverse in collaboration with Bored Ape Yacht Club, gmoney NFT, and PUNKS comic. In an article posted on the Adidas mobile app, the developers behind the initiative said the following: This autumn, Adidas, known for celebrating ideas at the bleeding edge of originality, it settling in at the frontier of creativity: The Metaverse. Our goal there? To see every one of its inhabitants thrive. The Metaverse is where anyone can express their most original ideas and be their most authentic selves, in whatever form they might take. And thanks to the blockchain …
Adoption / Dec. 2, 2021
Life-changing money: The 10 most expensive NFTs sold to date
Nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, are turning out to be a treasure store with prices striding into the millions of dollars. Instances of an NFT garnering more than $69 million or a tweet fetching $2.9 million are not a fantasy, but an incredible reality. In 2021, an NFT by digital artist Beeple, or Mike Winkelmann, sold for a whopping $69 million, making NFTs a media hotshot and opening the floodgates for a string of other NFT sales, many of these in millions of dollars. Prompted by the plentiful talk about NFTs, stars like Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Eminem, Grimes and many …
Adoption / May 16, 2022
5 ways to monetize your digital art with NFTs
Nonfungible tokens (NFTs) offer a new way to sell and distribute digital art, and they have the potential to unlock new revenue streams for artists in the digital age. Here are five ways to monetize your digital art with NFTs. Fractionalized ownership This involves splitting the ownership of an artwork into smaller parts and selling them as tokens, allowing multiple investors to own a stake in the artwork. For example, an artist can create 100 tokens for a piece of art and sell them to 100 different buyers, each of whom owns a share of the artwork. Related: How do …
Adoption / Feb. 19, 2023