
I have written about Bright Moments before. They are a digital art company exploring the intersection of NFTs and real-world experiences. It started as a popup gallery in Venice Beach California, where artists could show new work and where collectors could buy IRL. They then created their own pixel art collection called CryptoVenetians. It included 1,000 different people-centered NFTs by artist QianQian. Since then, they have gone on to host events and create new CryptoCitizen collections in New York, Berlin, London, Mexico City, Tokyo, and Buenos Aires. And this week they were in Paris.
(I don't know why they skipped over Toronto!)
https://twitter.com/seth/status/1761302227216376000?s=20
Their end goal is to create a complete collection of 10,000 NFTs, most of which are tied to a specific city. (The only one that isn't is their CryptoGalacticans collection.) What's obviously great about this approach is that it's a way to promote digital art and onboard new users into the crypto space. They are literally going around the world, throwing parties, and saying "look how cool and fun this whole crypto thing is." At the same time, it also links the digital and the physical, which I believe is fundamental. We're social beings and web3 will never change that.
The other interesting thing about Bright Moments is that they are structured as a decentralized autonomous organization (or DOA). That's like a company, except that governance is distributed to its tokenholders and it's all managed on a blockchain. But it still operates as a company and it can raise money like one too. In 2021,
https://twitter.com/CyberBrokers_/status/1572224061119533056?s=20&t=qZlgoHSqui9npg4jr1fzLg
One of the most interesting things about NFTs is that some, but not all, come with very permissive licensing. What this could mean is that, as a holder, you are free to do whatever you would like with your NFTs, including creating businesses on top of them or using them for other commercial purposes. This is fascinating to me and I like NFT projects that adopt this open approach.
In the past, we have talked about Bored Ape Yacht Club owners creating things like restaurants on top of their NFTs. But here is another more recent example: An NFT from the CyberBrokers collection has just been signed to a Web3 record label called Player Zero. This is the company's first "Animated Virtual Artist", and her inaugural album is
