You witnessed a landmark conversation between Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, and Vitalik Buterin, creator of Ethereum, at ETHPrague conference 2025!
This POAP proves you visited the NFT Exhibition at ETHGlobal Prague 2025 and enjoyed this piece of community provided art. -- Inspired from the character Baldwin iv. I find this character interesting despite the suffering from leprosy he is still strong and continues uniting his people.
This POAP proves you visited the NFT Exhibition at ETHGlobal Prague 2025 and enjoyed this piece of community provided art. -- Pectra OâClock is what happens when medieval art meets modern crypto chaos. Inspired by Pragueâs Astronomical Clock, this piece ditches zodiac signs for Ethereum upgrades, NFT minting cycles, and DAO forksâbecause who needs stars when youâve got gas fees? At the center spins the Ethereum logo, while a tiny, frustrated Vitalik Buterin pops out yelling, âWhy is it 120 Gwei again?!ââthe eternal cry of anyone whoâs tried to mint during peak hours. The bottom dial, labeled PECTRA OâCLOCK, represents the unofficial time zone every Web3 user lives inâwhere moments are measured not in minutes, but in block confirmations and failed transactions. This artwork is a love letter (and a roast) to the Ethereum communityâbuilders, degens, and dreamersâcaught in the beautiful mess of decentralization. Itâs history, humor, and high gas rolled into one timeless loop.
This POAP proves you visited the NFT Exhibition at ETHGlobal Prague 2025 and enjoyed this piece of community provided art. -- This artwork was created by combining AI-generated elements with my own design, blending technology and human creativity. Much like Alphonse Muchaâs posters celebrated new ideas and captured the spirit of his time, this piece uses Art Nouveauâs style to present Ethereum as a symbol of modern innovation. The title Bull Epoch hints at a hopeful future, evoking optimism and growth, just as Art Nouveau was optimistic about progress and the future during its era. Inspired by solarpunk themes, this piece manifests a world where art and technology are intertwined, working together to inspire new ideas and possibilities. Rather than being tied to the past, we are looking forward...bullish on the next epoch.
This POAP proves you visited the NFT Exhibition at ETHGlobal Prague 2025 and enjoyed this piece of community provided art. -- Globy, now in Cubist form, is here to show you how Prague made Cubism its own! While Cubism began in France with artists like Picasso and Braque, Prague gave the movement a unique twistâbringing it into architecture with bold angles and geometric details. Curious to see it up close? Visit iconic spots like the House of the Black Madonna, KovaĹovic Villa, the Cubist Apartment Buildings at RaĹĄĂn Embankment, Diamond House, and even the angular staircase at the Church of St. Wenceslas. For an even deeper dive, head to the Czech Cubism exhibition inside the House of the Black Madonna. There, you'll find Cubism-inspired furniture, ceramics, glassware, paintings, and historic photos of Pragueâs one-of-a-kind architectural gems.
Just a Girl Czeching In at ETHGlobal Prague â ETHGlobal Prague Community NFT Exhibition
2025-05-31
This POAP proves you visited the NFT Exhibition at ETHGlobal Prague 2025 and enjoyed this piece of community provided art. -- "Part dreamer, part data" I am here, and not only here. In Prague, in code, in connection. My coffee warms this world; my presence ripples through another. The castle stands stillâ but I move between layers. A node in the network. A soul in the square. Rooted in place, unbound in presence. This artwork is a reflection of presence across realities. It explores what it means to exist in a moment physically, while also shaping digital space.
This POAP proves you visited the NFT Exhibition at ETHGlobal Prague 2025 and enjoyed this piece of community provided art. -- Prague is rich in culture, and the legend of the Golem is one of its most famous tales. In the 16th century, under Emperor Rudolf II, Pragueâs Jewish community faced violent persecution. To protect his people, Rabbi Judah Loewâbelieved to possess mystical powersâcreated the Golem, a human-like figure made of clay and brought to life with Hebrew incantations. He inscribed âemetâ (truth) on its forehead to animate it. For a time, the Golem guarded the Jewish quarter. But as it grew more powerful, it became uncontrollable, eventually turning violent and attacking non-Jewish citizens. To stop the chaos, Loew was promised an end to violence against Jews if he deactivated the Golem. He agreed, erasing the âeâ from âemetâ to form âmetâ (death), ending the Golemâs life. Legend says its body rests in the attic of the Old-New Synagogue. Today, the Golem still lives onâin Pragueâs folklore, statues, and even cookies.