Skip to main content
By C0F93A
By C0F93A

Greenwich, Connecticut, a suburb of New York City, is one of the wealthiest towns in the world. What remains of the original indigenous inhabitants of the land, while not invisible, can be hard to see. The land was commodified by settlers nearly four centuries ago. The native Siwanoy people were mistreated and removed from their land, but a friendly narrative of sharing of the land is used to justify the virtually infinite wealth of today’s inhabitants. Massive estates now sit on streets with indigenous names. Property owners bolt convex mirrors to trees to make sure they can see everything behind them clearly, to keep their expensive cars safe as they leave their wide driveways. But rearview vision can be distorted. These mirrors make everything look like a funhouse, and make it difficult to escape seeing one’s own reflection.

In my first NFT project, I am reflecting on the perils of commodification in the context of what seems like the latest technology to encourage it. When property ownership moves from the ephemeral to the physical or from the physical to the ephemeral, what is lost? Is anything gained? For whom? What stories do we tell to justify our decisions, and what distorted mirrors do we employ to look back and feel safe?

The World Today (TWT) collection image

Project website: https://twt.obscura.io.

138 world-class, established and emerging photographers from 5 continents brought together by Obscura to take the 1st global visual timestamp of the 21st century. 13,800 native 1/1 NFT photographs of cities, landscapes, communities, people, events and conceptual images that will tell our story for centuries to come, taken Mar-Apr 2022.

An ode to the 1955 exhibition “The Family of Man” by legendary curator Edward Steichen for the MoMA, The World Today uses the blockchain to create a permanent record of our world, rich in metadata connections that further develop and cross-reference the stories within, resulting in a complex net of properties and rarities including 138 curated grails, 1 from each artist.

TWT expanded the frontier of possibilities for photography in the web3 era, and is responsible for onboarding dozens world-class photographers to NFTs.

Category Photography
Contract Address0x35df...8bc0
Token ID12555
Token StandardERC-721
ChainEthereum
Last Updated2 years ago
Creator Earnings
10%

Distorted Mirrors 054

visibility
6 views
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Expiration
    From
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Floor Difference
    Expiration
    From
keyboard_arrow_down
Event
Price
From
To
Date

Distorted Mirrors 054

visibility
6 views
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Expiration
    From
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Floor Difference
    Expiration
    From
By C0F93A
By C0F93A

Greenwich, Connecticut, a suburb of New York City, is one of the wealthiest towns in the world. What remains of the original indigenous inhabitants of the land, while not invisible, can be hard to see. The land was commodified by settlers nearly four centuries ago. The native Siwanoy people were mistreated and removed from their land, but a friendly narrative of sharing of the land is used to justify the virtually infinite wealth of today’s inhabitants. Massive estates now sit on streets with indigenous names. Property owners bolt convex mirrors to trees to make sure they can see everything behind them clearly, to keep their expensive cars safe as they leave their wide driveways. But rearview vision can be distorted. These mirrors make everything look like a funhouse, and make it difficult to escape seeing one’s own reflection.

In my first NFT project, I am reflecting on the perils of commodification in the context of what seems like the latest technology to encourage it. When property ownership moves from the ephemeral to the physical or from the physical to the ephemeral, what is lost? Is anything gained? For whom? What stories do we tell to justify our decisions, and what distorted mirrors do we employ to look back and feel safe?

The World Today (TWT) collection image

Project website: https://twt.obscura.io.

138 world-class, established and emerging photographers from 5 continents brought together by Obscura to take the 1st global visual timestamp of the 21st century. 13,800 native 1/1 NFT photographs of cities, landscapes, communities, people, events and conceptual images that will tell our story for centuries to come, taken Mar-Apr 2022.

An ode to the 1955 exhibition “The Family of Man” by legendary curator Edward Steichen for the MoMA, The World Today uses the blockchain to create a permanent record of our world, rich in metadata connections that further develop and cross-reference the stories within, resulting in a complex net of properties and rarities including 138 curated grails, 1 from each artist.

TWT expanded the frontier of possibilities for photography in the web3 era, and is responsible for onboarding dozens world-class photographers to NFTs.

Category Photography
Contract Address0x35df...8bc0
Token ID12555
Token StandardERC-721
ChainEthereum
Last Updated2 years ago
Creator Earnings
10%
keyboard_arrow_down
Event
Price
From
To
Date