Part of the Kulture Collective’s NF-NFT Weekend — a three-day community learning event for which a collection of local businesses and residents have come together to gain a deeper understanding of this new medium and economy.
Hosted by Sid Gold’s Request Room with pianist Sammy Buttons at the Halyard Piano Bar from 7:00pm-9:00pm on Friday March 25 and Saturday March 26. Part of the Kulture Collective’s NF-NFT Weekend — a three-day community learning event for which a collection of local businesses and residents have come together to gain a deeper understanding of this new medium and economy.
Performance of Together We Are by Brendan Fernandes. Performance locations: Soundview Greenport 58775 Country Road; VSOP Projects 311 Front Street, Greenport NY. Part of the Kulture Collective’s NF-NFT Weekend — a three-day community learning event for which a collection of local businesses and residents have come together to gain a deeper understanding of this new medium and economy.
Commemorate the weekend in Greenport on a bike ride with Priority Bicycles. Part of the Kulture Collective’s NF-NFT Weekend — a three-day community learning event for which a collection of local businesses and residents have come together to gain a deeper understanding of this new medium and economy.
The Kulture Collective’s NF-NFT Weekend is a three-day community learning event for which a collection of local businesses and residents have come together to gain a deeper understanding of this new medium and economy. Presented by Kulture Collective. March 25 - 27
Brendan Fernandes (b. 1979, Nairobi, Kenya) is an internationally recognized Canadian artist working at the intersection of dance and visual arts. Currently based out of Chicago, Brendan’s projects address issues of race, queer culture, migration, protest and other forms of collective movement. Brendan's Genesis NFT drop "Souvenir" acknowledges the artist’s own hybrid identity as a Kenyan, Indian, Canadian and American. This work aims to create a collective acknowledgement of change as displacement, but in shared histories of marginalized identity, we can recontextualize this displacement and reclaim it as empowerment.