Humans Being by Blind Gallery, an allowlist opportunity to Jonas Lund's drop, Roope Rainisto's latest creation, and more...

Here are 5 things worth sharing from the digital art world...

Hola amigos!

Time for another weekly digest. Here are 5 things worth sharing about the digital art world:

1. Last week, I recorded the first podcast episode.

For the second episode, Iโ€™ll be joined by 0xFAR, a generative artist and entrepreneur creating on Bitcoin Ordinals.

The next episode will be recorded on Twitter Spaces ๐Ÿ‘‰ Set a reminder.

2. Humans Being by and a mysterious artist.

Humans Being โ€” an AI-curated series โ€” delves into the complex relationship between humanity, technology, and perception. Read the full story here.

  • Pre-sale: July 10

  • Public sale: July 11

  • Artist reveal: after the public sale.

Humans Being by Blind Gallery

Humans Being by Blind Gallery. Read the collection story here.

Kalohโ€™s Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

3. [Upcoming Collection] Most Accidents Happen at Home by Jonas Lund via Wildxyz

Most Accidents Happen at Home is a collection of 3D artworks that explores the dissonance between real and imagined physics across both tangible and virtual environments. Each artwork is composed of a series of teetering towers of common house-hold objects arranged in seemingly impossible or maybe just highly improbable balancing configurations.

Most Accidents Happen at Home by Jonas Lund.

Most Accidents Happen at Home by Jonas Lund.

Iโ€™m excited to share a new allowlist opportunity in partnership with Wildxyz. Fill out the Pre Mint form below for a chance to win a spot.

Deadline July 11, 11 am CET.

Get allowlist access

4. Agent Story by Roope Rainisto

The creator of Life In West America shared a Fully text-to-video generated.

No init images and no init videos were used to put it together.

5. [Interesting Read] The Artists Who Rewired Web 2, published On Right Click Save

A generation of female creators has been challenging algorithmic domination for years, writes Nina Knaack ๐Ÿ‘‰ Read now.

Until next time,

- Kaloh


You can now refer your friends to my newsletter to help me grow and earn benefits!

Invite your friends here

Loading...
highlight
Collect this post to permanently own it.
Kaloh's Newsletter logo
Subscribe to Kaloh's Newsletter and never miss a post.