Skip to main content

Click Is on a Mission To Keep Art Alive Through NFT Archives

NFTs are taking the same hit as many growth investments in what’s been a belt-tightening 2022. Despite the slowdown, collectors have injected over $37 billion into NFT marketplaces as of May 1, putting revenue on pace to beat the $40 billion sold in 2021. This is due, in large part, to specific platforms spiking the market. Bored Ape Yacht Club’s offer to morph avatars into multiplayer, Monopoly-esque game characters, for instance, raised about $285 million in cryptocurrency alone this year.

For artists and musicians, the blockchain is an opportunity to securitize work, and access new eyes. For platforms, this is a way to encourage art archives and creation. On Click’s new platform, for example, these NFT sales serve as unique investments that support and preserve undiscovered work from artist estates. Each Click drop will unveil a noted digital artist’s work as inspired by renowned painters, sculptors, and creators of all stripes. NFT proceeds will not only earn money for art professionals and fund educational art initiatives, they’ll help to unearth and archive never-before-seen art, video, letters, photos, and artwork from culture-defining artists.

Imagery from Click's upcoming NFT drop.
Click.

“Without this effort/project, this work could be lost forever,” Click co-founder Billy Folchetti said in a conversation with The Manual. “It’s like a top-secret adventure. It’s about telling a really great story through the use of NFTs and blockchain.”

Click is on a mission to at once uncover and digitally conserve. Take renowned contemporary sculptor John Chamberlain, for instance. Click co-founder Alexandra Fairweather is a director of Chamberlain’s estate. In this work, she strives to keep alive Chamberlain’s post-industrial vision by digitizing the development of his metallic work while mining for hidden veins.

“What we are talking about is finding archives of never before seen artworks and personal objects of these estates,” Folchetti said. “It’s like going on a treasure hunt, opening a 10,000 sq. ft. space that hasn’t seen the light of day in 20 years. You’ll come across things you’d never guess. We want our followers to feel that too.”

Click’s themed NFT drops will help to fund this preservation. Fairweather and Folchetti are looking to tap into old and new school art collectors. This audience can range from art aficionados and big investors to a younger set, attracted to a new aesthetic speaking in a curated language they can understand.

“It’s not just about making money. Part of it is telling history, part of it is doing good, and part of this is about beautiful, significant NFTs,” Folchetti said.

Click.

Click collectors will not only purchase a digital piece of art, but also physical specimens. The (Dis)integration collection, for example, is shaped around work that describes the car, a preeminent symbol of American manufacturing — in disintegration. Inspired by discarded cassette tapes left behind in abandoned automobiles, buyers will receive a cassette that uncovers ideas behind the art series and the lost history the show uncovers.

“Small pieces that make a part of the bigger story allows people to stay intrigued,” Folchetti said.

In addition to exclusive arts and culture openings, Click participants will earn access to programming like VIP events and collector-specific Discord groups. Buyers of The (Dis)integration NFT drop will also get select entry to upcoming Click openings and programming for 12 months following purchase.

Each NFT release will also include its own traditional art opening with digital work on display.

“Each drop will have a 30 to 45-day window for an entire solo show for each artist,” Folchetti said. “It’s a place to shop, but also an educational destination. There will be lots of focus on questions and answers with individuals who worked with and were friends with artists. A fundamental part of institutions is getting behind the canvas.”

This collective effort serves as a testament to Click’s partner work with creators, executors, foundations, and museums to fund future artworks, public programs, exhibitions, restorations, and publications. Though Click is headquartered in New York City, the group is aligning with art and cultural institutions across the country and working to offer all types of different experiences for its growing community.

“NFT drops will normally be at the artist’s museum, but many Click-oriented projects are not specific to an artist or museum,” Folchetti said. “We’re figuring out a way to be inclusive, to access people where they are. We hope that as we expand, our group of partners will expand geographically.”

Towards Click’s drive to finance future projects, 20% of proceeds will benefit Art21, a New York City “nonprofit organization dedicated to inspiring a more creative world through the works and words of contemporary artists.”

“Art21 is forward-thinking and inclusive, so it’s a natural choice for us,” Folchetti said. “There’s a great synergy there in being able to support new artists and new generations and people who don’t have their name yet.”

To foster a new generation of art creators, future Click projects will likely continue to support local arts groups. This intertwines both founders’ aim to build a diverse collection of cultural enthusiasts who can all have a hand in keeping art vital.

“It’s about generating revenue streams for artists and estates in a modern, sexy way. Younger generations are losing valuable pieces of history and art’s story,” Folchetti said. “NFTs give us the ability to tell (stories) on the blockchain and put it in front of the younger generation in a more subliminal way.”

Learn More

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Matthew Denis
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Matt Denis is an on-the-go remote multimedia reporter, exploring arts, culture, and the existential in the Pacific Northwest…
Will there be a Beef season 2?
Are you eager to see Beef season 2?
Ali Wong and Steven Yeun in Beef.

One year ago, Beef quickly established itself as one of the best shows on Netflix. Series creator Lee Sung Jin brought together The Walking Dead's Steven Yeun and Always Be My Maybe star Ali Wong as Danny Cho and Amy Lau, respectively. Danny and Amy were strangers to each other until a road rage incident transforms both of their lives. Once Danny and Amy learn more about each other, they escalate their conflict until it threatens to consume both of them.

That story resonated with viewers and swept Beef to Emmy wins for Best Miniseries, as well as Best Actor and Best Actress in a Miniseries for both Yeun and Lau. However, it appears that calling Beef a "miniseries" was a bit premature. Although Netflix hasn't officially announced a renewal, the early news is looking very promising. That's why we're going to tell you everything we know about Beef season 2.
Will there be a Beef season 2?

Read more
The best shows to binge on Peacock in May
Lots of NBC hits are on Peacock now — here are the best shows to watch
Gabriel Macht wearing a light gray suit

There are definitely too many streaming services. Thanks to Netflix's revolution, every broadcast network and parent company decided that they had to get in on the streaming wars. Peacock TV is NBC Universal's streaming service, and although it may not seem like the most attractive option, there are actually a number of great Peacock movies and shows available on the service that are hard to find anywhere else.
Some of those popular shows are Peacock streaming originals, although there are plenty that initially aired on NBC or elsewhere, and have wound their way to Peacock thanks in part to the complicated nature of TV rights. Regardless of where the best Peacock shows came from originally, though, all the ones on this list are well worth checking out. Looking for more streaming options? We also have your guide to the best shows on Netflix, the best shows on Hulu, and the best shows on Paramount Plus.

Suits (2011)

Read more
The best shows on Starz to watch in May
From Outlander to Party Down, these are the best shows you can stream on Starz
Outlanders

Starz has proven since its inception that it can hang with larger competitors like Max. Although it's now making television in an incredibly crowded landscape, Starz has managed to regularly launch shows that make an impact, and it speaks to the enduring quality of these shows that they've also stood the test of time.
These shows have also spanned a wide array of genres, making viewers laugh and weep, often in equal measure. Through it all, though, these Starz shows have proven it can reliably make shows that touch viewers and endure for years after their time on the air has concluded.

Party Down (2009)

Read more