On December 4, 2021, it was reported that the record for the highest price ever paid for a work by a living artist, set by Jeff Koons’s Rabbit in 2019 at US$91.1 million, had been broken. The new record‑holding piece, Merge (2021), had achieved US$91.8 million. But this sale was just the beginning of a controversy.
The “artwork” was in fact made up of 266,455 NFTs, each comprising a single dot known as a “mass”. These variously sized and priced dots were purchased, in varying numbers, by approximately 26,000 buyers within a 48‑hour window on the platform Nifty Gateway. Every time a collector bought a new mass, it would merge with those they already owned; further, collectors could sell their mass on to other buyers—leading, potentially, to the formation of one giant mass.
Naturally, this “drop” added fuel to the discussion fire of whether an NFT is, in fact, art, and whether this multiple ownership model is comparable to the performance of sales like Koons’s.
Merge was conceived by pioneering “creator”, Pak, about whom little is known: is Pak a man, a woman, an AI‑operated entity? They use a voice modulator when speaking over the phone, but they only do that with people they work with. Twitter seems to be the preferred mode of communication, where Pak frequently shares dramatic but simple philosophical one‑liners, invariably generating hype for forthcoming projects.
What is known, however, is Pak’s intention: to democratise accessibility to art and other collectible goods through sophisticated and innovative coding, pushing the boundaries of what NFTs, as a medium, can accomplish.
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