Hirst's NFT project, which compares the value of digital and physical art, is known as 'The Currency.'
Thousands of Damien Hirst's original paintings, valued at almost £10 million altogether, are being burned after the artist promised to destroy them as part of a digital art stunt.
10,000 dot paintings with unique identities were made by Hirst in 2016 and sold for $2,000 each after being linked to their own NFTs in 2021. All of the artist's paintings incorporate anti-counterfeiting features like watermarks and holographic representations of him in order to safeguard his creations.
The Currency, an exhibition by the "wealthiest" artist in the UK, is a collection of 10,000 NFTs, one-of-a-kind digital tokens that may be sold online and represent 10,000 works of original art.
Hirst's idea was to give collectors the option of keeping their NFT or exchanging it for the actual piece of art while promising to destroy any paintings that were not exchanged. The project is a component of Hirst's societal experiment, which compares the value of digital and physical art.
One year was provided to collectors who had purchased one of the $2,000 floor-priced NFTs to determine whether they wanted to keep the NFT or exchange it for the actual painting.