2020年12月21日

My real-life footage in 2020

The Future of Art-VR, AI and Blockchain

 


Update:  We closed Artpot as our partners have different plans for this coming year, I registered Artbit to continue the art business, Artbit is a new company and focuses on art media, curations, VR, and NFTs not associated with Artpot. 

Vernissage Hamptons, Nude VR, High Line Chelsea Open Studios, and Park 23 Art Fair will push to summer and fall.  

Art, VR, AI, and Blockchain ( Video in above) 

What will art look like in 20 years?
The future may be uncertain, but some things are undeniable: climate change, shifting demographics, geopolitics.  The only guarantee is that there will be changes, both wonderful and terrible. It’s worth considering how artists will respond to these changes, as well as what purpose art serves, now and in the future.

Nine of the 10 most expensive paintings ever sold were made between 1892 and 1955, the only exception being a newly discovered Leonardo da Vinci from between 1490 and 1519, which fetched an extraordinary $450.3m at auction, making it the most expensive artwork ever sold. Every painting on the list was made by a white man, however, which doesn’t paint a very hopeful picture for equality. In the year 2040, art might not look like art (unless it’s a painting), but it will look like everything else, reflecting zeitgeists as multitudinous and diverse as the artists themselves.

Art clearly has a future that will continue to branch into new forms, including continuing to integrate new technology. Both Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality offer excellent ways to create immersive work, where the viewer can experience the artwork utilizing a headset or phone. Is it just all about money? One of the art market’s greatest challenges for works where the artist is no longer alive is to verify its authenticity and provenance.

In a 2014 report, The Fine Arts Expert Institute (FAEI) in Geneva stated that over 50% of the artworks it had examined were either forged or not attributed to the correct artist. Blockchain could change this. As a public, decentralized list of records that are linked and secured using cryptography, blockchain’s key feature is its fragmented nature. Hosted by millions of computers simultaneously, no centralized version of the information exists for a hacker to access or corrupt. Thus blockchain is currently believed to be the most secure way to transfer digital data. Blockchain’s capacity to track and verify authenticity through timestamps on transactions and cryptographic signatures can solve that problem.
Event host: Manana Samuseva

Panelists: 

Katya Zvereva, artist, NYC, LA https://www.instagram.com/katyazvereva

Christina Steinbrecher-Pfandt, the founder of Blockchain.art

https://www.linkedin.com/.../christina-steinbrecher...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christina_Steinbrecher-Pfandt

Giovanna Sun, Artist, curator and the founder of Artbit

https://www.linkedin.com/in/giovannasun

Manana Samuseva, iLIFT TV, BuroHQ, CryptoHQ, Women in Venture

https://www.linkedin.com/in/mananasamuseva

 

2020年11月30日

The Irishman-Computer-generated imagery technics

On Thanksgiving weekend, I watched "The Irishman," and I also saw the behind the scene.  

Robert Deniro looks a lot younger in the film. 


I thought it was another actor who plays his younger version.  

And I realized it's the CGI ( Computer-generated imagery ) from director Martin Scorsese's idea. He heard people said to him in Taiwan when he directed another film, "Silence" ( 2016)


Scorsese didn't like the idea in the past, and the CG technician makes the marks smaller on the actors' faces, so it's easier to make the change of the face.


It's the after effect to make Robert Deniro plays the whole movie without makeup and find a younger actor to play his part.