CONGRATULATIONS. you have subjected your mind and body parts to PepeFest at Beeple Studios and your life finally has meaning!!! cool.
DIGITAL ART DEATHMATCH _ 05.04.24 // BEEPLE STUDIOS this POAP hereby signifies you were there to bear witness to our last stand against the AI armageddon. a time BEFORE the robot revolution when humans owned robots.
This FREE 2 day open house art gallery set in the heart of Manhattan. This 2500 sqft art gallery will serve as a co-working space/networking location away from the main NFT NYC conference with a more laid back atmosphere. On the 3rd we'll have coffee, food, drinks, wifi, and plenty of art to take in. So stay for 20 and check out the art or stay for an hour and get some work done (limited seating). 2:00 Doors Open 2:00 - 8:00 Open Gallery, Co-Working, Networking On the 4th we'll screen animated short films produced by Atrium, CC0 Studios, and one of the artists behind the most recent Space Jam Movie (Alex Orrelle). 2:00 Doors Open 2:00 - 4:30 Open Gallery, Co-Working, Networking 4:30 - 6:00 Screenings + Panels 6:00 - 6:30 Quick Turnover 6:30 - 9:30 Happy Hour (But a hyped one, but not quite a ragger, like you'll be able to carry on a conversation but still feel like you got your bop on. We'll have a variety of panels discussing NFT IP and its role in film. This event is brought to you by: CC0 Studios Studio TBD King’s Coin Mining 3DFrankenPunks
This POAP commemorates Grant Yun’s first physical solo exhibition Growing Up in Seoul, South Korea. Hosted by Avant Arte, the exhibition is open to the public from 22-30 March 2024 at Soft Corner Gallery in Gangnam-gu, Seoul. “Growing up is a journey you take on your own.” Since 2019, Grant Yun has lived between his permanent home in Wisconsin and New England. When the Covid pandemic hit he found himself isolating in Connecticut. Like the rest of the world, he was “forced to take in that loneliness.” A feeling of distance saturates this series of works on paper. Sometimes that is the cultural distance between an immigrant parent and their child – while the child craves American snacks like a PB&J, the parent relishes in the delayed gratification of kimchee (Mom Made Dinner!). Although he grew up in California, the weight of history Yun felt in New England caused him to reflect on his childhood as a first-generation Korean-American. This is encapsulated in the tender depiction of a father, Dad. The figure disappearing into the shadow of a house is a sombre reminder of generational distance, captured in an everyday scene remembered from childhood. Growing Up is Yun’s first exhibition in Korea, and feels like a full circle moment for him. It presents his quintessentially American Neo-Precisionism in South Korea, connecting two of the cultures that raised him.