Shanghai West Bund Art Forum – New Trend on Online Art Collecting of the Post-Covid Era

On 12th November, I attended an online forum held by Shanghai West Bund Voice, gained some new Information. West Bund is one of the most important art fairs in China that will open a short term every autumn, this is their 8th year.

As following are some notes from the conversations.

New Trend on Online Art Collecting of the Post-Covid EraGuest Speaker:
Wang Shujin (Partner of YITIAO)
Alda Xie (Young collector, Founder of hAo mArket)
Julia Long (Artist)
James Li (Founder of CHOCO1ATE)
Sun Bohan (Curator, Founder of BCA Network, Vulcan DAO co-initiator)
Moderator:
Ashley Qin (Yit Art & Auction, Art Advisor)

Q: Online art sales have developed extremely fast. How did Yitiao and BCA gradually deal with this matter?

Wang Shujin: Before the outbreak of the epidemic, in 2019, Yitiao was already building an art auction platform. At that time, our users came in by watching a video. After five or six years of accumulation, our users are all high-esthetic, high-net-worth users. So in 2019, we tried to build an online platform and later found that our users responded very positively to this area.

By March of this year, we have set up a dedicated online art channel to cooperate with 80 galleries and 500 artists. It is estimated that by 2022, the turnover can reach about 1 billion.

Sun Bohan: BCA has actually been paying attention to the direction of blockchain art since the end of 2018. You may have heard about the blockchain, and NFTs have also become very popular recently. Everyone will ask what exactly NFT is. It can be simply understood as an online transaction in the web3 system. The concept of NFT is so popular, I think a large part of it is because of the epidemic. In Europe and the United States, we don’t have more offline social space, so we need to find a sense of belonging online, or a sense of ritual to appreciate art. This also echoes the recent hot spot called “Meta Universe”. They are actually a digital world or a virtual online world. From the beginning, we will do digital-related, including video, or some pure programming artists. Before these artists were offline or in traditional gallery art fairs, they did not have good opportunities and paid more attention. So this is a point we are more concerned about.

Q: The amount of online art purchases is amazing. Have the two collectors tried to browse or even purchase art from the Internet? Is the experience in this process different from offline?

Alda Xie: The Internet is now a necessity in everyone’s lives, so browsing art on it must have become everyone’s habit. For example, galleries will post PDF previews of artworks before exhibitions or expositions, including some art museum institutions that will also put their collections online and open them to the public for viewing and so on. I think it is not even a trend anymore, it is already a status quo.

It has its advantages, but it also has certain limitations. From the perspective of my collector’s identity, its advantage is that it breaks through a lot of information barriers and lowers the threshold for certain collections or art purchases, so that everyone’s psychological burden is not so heavy, so as to understand all kinds of happenings around the world. The latest state of the art,
including if you follow the private accounts of some artists, like Instagram, you can also learn behind-the-scenes stories that you didn’t know much about before. I think these are good places.

James Li: I think one thing is unquestionable. Although with the development of technology, our experience of viewing artworks through the media has become better and better, and even more and more abundant and diverse, it still cannot be solved. Our human eyes An intuitive reflection and multi-dimensional collision of artworks.

The development of technology is very rapid. For the first time, we had to face the online exhibition during the epidemic. When everyone entered at the same time, they collapsed. No one could enter, and everyone was very anxious.
Now only a short period of more than a year has passed. All these underlying technical problems are no longer a problem, even because with the rise of the entire concept of Metaverse, whether it is VR, AR, or Some more advanced technologies, some future things, will slowly come to the collector’s side, to serve us to better choose and purchase works.

Q5: In dealing with this kind of Internet art trade, is there anything that needs to be kept alert, including some Internet reports on artists and social network exposure?

Julia Long: Many artists now post their own stuff online, or some gallery operators may not be particularly professional themselves. For many collectors, it is difficult to tell whether your own collection of artists is worth collecting.

A friend asked how a certain painter was before, and someone who knew better than him told him that there are too many people who paint like this, and they don’t have much recognition. For collectors, it is necessary to find a good reference, or a good platform to learn. As an artist, don’t over-beautify your resume. You still have to treat your creations or your own inner ideas more truthfully.


Alda Xie: Maybe some collectors who are just getting started will pay attention to the image created on the artist’s social media, but this image may be a beautiful image. Some people simply look at some of the content presented on social media, or the number of their fans. Some people may even look at it in detail. For example, a curator on Instagram may have liked him, or a collector may have known him. Does that mean that he has investment value?

Q: What new prospects do you have for the future of this form of Internet art collection?

Wang Shujin: Yitiao is actually positioning oneself in an incremental position for the art circle. Through this platform, the predicament of not being able to get out of the circle is eliminated. For art consumption, from professional art collectors (a group of very small circles) to the majority of art lovers, the mid-range price has become the largest increase. At the same time this year, collectors and consumers are showing a younger trend, and their consumption obviously has their own preferences. Coupled with the drastic changes in the way of communication: new media, video, live broadcast, etc. The art consumption and collection users found through Internet operation methods are more accurate and more matched.

James Li: As a collector, I am very much looking forward to the development of Internet technology, including meta-universe technology. Eventually, when we search for a certain artist or a certain type of artwork, we will get a diversified result.

For artists, the reverse also gives a new outlet and ideas for creation and a better platform for artists whose artistic creation is not a traditional painting technique.

Image

After reading: How to Fly a Horse by Kevin Ashton

When talking with potential stakeholders, there’s always a sound showing that: I just don’t like the idea of NFT, NFT is all about money. But soon I found that they even mixed the idea of NFT and crypto art, and ignored the difference between technology and art. They even don’t know what they are hating for, and they just hate it.

I know this is kind of the last stage of my project in my MA, I should focus on the stakeholders who I already reached. However, it is vital for me to understand in-depth why people are standing on the other side.

The book ‘How to Fly a Horse’ corroborated my thoughts. People tend to reject new things, or at least be sceptical. When we are in a familiar situation, the firing speed of the hippocampal cells in the brain is hundreds of times faster than in the new environment. The hippocampus connects two nerve plexuses, called amygdalae (amygdalae)-derived from the Greek word almond-responsible for our emotions. The hippocampus is connected to the amygdala, which is one of the reasons why we like familiarity and reject strangers.

When the brain has a response, we will follow suit and avoid evil. When new things appear, the hippocampus will not find relevant memories and will send strange signals to the amygdala, which makes us feel uncertain. Uncertainty is disgusting, and we always avoid this state as much as possible. Psychologists have proved this with many experiments. Uncertainty makes us like the old and dislike the new, and prevents us from accepting new ideas, even if we think we value them or are good at creating.

Those who rejected to know the NFT are rejecting most of the new things in their life. There’s nothing I can do rather just say I understand.

P.S the definition of Luddism:

Luddism was a working-class movement opposed to the political consequences of industrial capitalism. The Luddites wanted technology to be deployed in ways that made work more humane and gave workers more autonomy. The bosses, on the other hand, wanted to drive down costs and increase productivity

How Museum Promote Today

Text Interaction

Enter Send Me SFMOMA. Send Me SFMOMA was conceived as a way to bring transparency to the collection while engendering further exploration and discussion among users. Send Me SFMOMA is an SMS service that provides an approachable, personal, and creative method of sharing the breadth of SFMOMA’s collection with the public.

https://www.sfmoma.org/read/send-me-sfmoma
Social media

In process of editing…

The Fear of NFTs

https://unitlondon.com/whats-on/84-group-exhibition-nftism-no-fear-in-trying/

It’s a human defence mechanism to reject the unfamiliar without giving it a chance; change is hard to stomach, something that unsettles the status quo. Human nature pushes back at first blush rather than learn about and accept something new for what it is—a potential advance and step forward. NFTs are just such a transformative phenomenon, a potential revolution in the history of art and its dissemination into the collective stream of consciousness, and commerce! This show will attempt to do what no one has done before! FOCUS ON THE ART, art from a wide, diverse universe of talent from all walks of life.

Kenny Schachter, curator of NFTismNFear in Trying

Reflective Writing: The “Art” in Crypto Art

I have to confess that I was so nervous every time when I was asked what NFT is or how to join NFT for the past few months since I have started this project.

Doubtlessly, this is a big question, and as everybody knows, what is behind the blockchain is a complex algorithm that 99% person would never figure out. However, I felt so pressured when I have to provide a perfect and integral answer for the question because I don’t want to let them down. 

But why should everybody know everything about NFT? 

I still don’t know how these stock works, but I buy my breakfast smoothly every day and could appreciate the artworks well in galleries. The technology thing would never be the star in the art world unless some artists wanna create some pieces about that. Art is always concerned with feeling, aesthetics is always about what we sense. It is regret that we turned away from Crypto Art just because we don’t know blockchain, besides the squares is never the thing. 

For now, I’d like to leave the techs away, focus on the art itself. What Crypto Art could be different from traditional Art? What we could bring to Crypto Art in this era? As an art lover, what can I bring to my stakeholders?

However, the stakeholders won’t change under this situation, because my role is more like an art dealer, I need to associate with artists and buyers and relevant art workers at the same time.

Fortunately, I feel more confident about what I am doing.

Stakeholder: Yusi Liu

Yusi Liu, <Stray Cat>, 2021

I met Yusi in 2015 when we began our bachelor degree. Now she is studying painting at Shanghai Normal University. As following is a brief of our conversation.

Crypto Art

Yusi had heart about NFTs and Crypto Art, but only a bit. She thinks she would be in the top per cent of the Chinses, cause rare students would talk about it, and even the tutors didn’t know about it. Mostly they got news from their friends who are studying abroad.

So I introduced the concept and the big news in the Crypto world to her.

Some problems we found that could not solve immediately for Chinese artists :

  • Language
  • Having no idea where and how to upload
  • Expensive gas fee

For collectors:

  • Why need to buy it?
  • The Wechat program Pingmujian (started from 2017) is a similar model logic as the platform for crypto Art, but seldom people buy in
  • Still a big question left in traditional art world, especially Chinese, only the minorities spend money on it
Where would Chinese spend money most
  • Designer toy like Takashi Murakami, Kaws
  • Digital prints for commercial purpose
Reflection

From Yusi’s perspective, promoting the digital exhibition could be a way that promotes crypto artwork. In China, most people do not know about Crypto art yet, which means there’s also a huge space to do something.

During the conversation, we also talked about our views towards Chinese and “western” painting. We both agree that they are so different that will appeal to a different audience. Though personally, I like the Chinese style more, because of the typical Chinese aesthetics, while Yusi would prefer the “western”, due to the creative expression. This is a big topic and we discussed it a lot but this is a crypto blog so I won’t talk more. Anyway, it’s good to know the different attitudes.

For the next step of my intervention, I shall focus on the promotion of digital art. Also, let more Chinese artists know more about Crypto art.

China Crypto Art Map

Marketplace

  • Golden Legend
  • ibox.com
  • CRYPTOART.AI
  • myNFT
  • TopBidder
  • iNFT
  • Binance NFT
  • nft arts
  • MetaOpus
  • ArtGee
  • NFTBOX

DAO

decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) is an entity with no central leadership. Decisions get made from the bottom-up, governed by a community organized around a specific set of rules enforced on a blockchain. DAOs are internet-native organizations collectively owned and managed by their members.

  • MAO DAO
  • G Art Fund
  • Vulcan Dao
  • MAA DAO
  • DAOSquare
  • National Architects
  • Yeah Dao

Gallery

  • Shanghai Gallery
  • CHIJIN Museum
  • ArtGee
  • WaveC
  • Ting Song Museum

Artist

  • Cai Guo-Qiang
  • Wu Di
  • Zhang Zhi-Wei
  • Wu Jian-An
  • Liu Xin
  • Roxie Ren
  • Loxel
  • Sun Yi-Dian
  • Liu Gang
  • Huang He-Shan
  • Yu Wang
  • Rui Huang
  • Lulu
  • BonnyBB
  • Jeffreysxy
  • DABEIYUZHOU
  • Sleepy
  • Richthefan
  • Yuan Jin-Hua
  • Daidi319
  • Liu Jia-Ying

Cruator

  • Cao Yin
  • Will Lang
  • Sun Bo-Han
  • Qin Jian-Xin
  • Ting Song
  • Guo Cheng
  • Yang Ga

Infrastructure

  • TOUCHAIN
  • AlchemyNFT
  • xNFT

Stakeholder: Yuxin Cheng

X’Diptera, Dabeiyuzhou, 2020

Yuxin is my CSM classmate, she currently is working at BCA as a curator.

BCA is a full-category blockchain art NFT platform that integrates blockchain art creation, investment collection and education output. It is centred on MetaOpus and is committed to creating a person Encrypted art ecosystem where everyone can participate.

As following is the summary of our conversation:

BCA
  • 30-40 staff members
  • Mainly young artist (millerals, and gen Z)
  • Top artists: Dabeiyuzhou, Zhiwei Zhang (acution)
  • Aiming to develop young artists
Bohan Sun
  • Founder of BCA
  • The current development of Crypto art is inseparable from the construction of infrastructure
  • To cultivate a group of collectors
  • The current crypto art auction payment process has a high threshold
  • There is still a gap between the current national aesthetic perception level and foreign markets, we need to find ways to participate in this industry with more Chinese or local characteristics
MetaOpus
  • 80k+user, 500+ signed artitsts
  • Chinese > users from other countries
Reflection

I used to believe that some people criticize that digital art is not “real” art, but who decides what is “real” art? After the conversation with Yuxi, also the study of Bohan, I will first propose that physical art is not real art, real art only exists in digital In the world. In fact, art is art, and it can appear in any form. The reason why art is amazing is that it does not need to be widely admired, it is only created for creation.

BCA is a pioneer organisation in China, it is so lucky for me that being Yuxin’s classmate. She told me a lot of information about the BCA that I couldn’t share here, but it is so important for me to understand more about the Chinese crypto industry.