Will NFTs Kill Traditional Art? Famed Collector Cozomo de’ Medici Makes The Case

Digital magazine and gallery Artnet gave Cozomo de’ Medici the keys to the castle. The notorious NFT collector took over their very popular Twitter account to raise hell. Cozomo de’ Medici’s thesis is that “the internet killed the yellow pages. Netflix killed Blockbuster,” and NFTs will replace traditional art. A bold prediction, we know, but let’s give the pseudonymous collector the benefit of the doubt and explore his thread.

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The story starts with Artnet NFT 30. A list of the 30 most influential people in the NFT world. Of course, Cozomo de’ Medici was one of them. As a publicity stunt, Artnet gave Cozomo control of their Twitter. “And starting now, I will be taking over the ARTNET Twitter! I warned them I may be controversial ;),” de’ Medici said. And then, “Ok frens, so I dropped a bit of a bomb over on the Artnet twitter account. They had NO idea I was going to do this!”

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Besides NFT recommendations and commentary, Cozomo de’ Medici made a name for himself on Twitter by making outrageous statements. One of them is, “Crypto billionaires will flip traditional billionaires. NFTs will flip traditional art.” Let’s explore that idea.

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NFTs Will Kill Traditional Art, According To Cozomo de’ Medici

The notorious NFT collector begins by comparing the NFT revolution to the advent of Reality TV. “For almost 100 years, the studios decided which actors would be lucky or talented enough to become stars. But then in the 2000’s, everything changed. The cameras turned from focusing on actors, to every day people. With Reality TV, soon it wasn’t a trained actor who was getting famous, but your classmate, co-worker, or next door neighbor. ”

Ok, so far so good.

Then, Cozomo turns to art. For centuries, “kings, queens, and noble folk decided which art was relevant.“ Then, the tide shifted, “in the Victorian era of the 1800s, galleries, museums, and collectors began to move markets.” The problem here was that the public had zero access to these artists. By the time they learned “about Warhol or Basqiat, their work has become expensive, the best pieces gobbled up by known collectors and market makers.”

Enter NFTs. “No museums. No galleries, other than the marketplaces, and the galleries made by collectors themselves.” A heap of now well-known artists came out of this change of paradigm. But that’s not all, “any artist, from any where in the world, with no invitation, can mint a drop.” Also, the power shifted to the consumer. “YOU can decide which artists will define this generation.“

You’re In Control Of The New Art Elite

Then, Cozomo de’ Medici shouts out two artists. Who, of course, are part of Artnet NFT 30 as well.

Photographer Justin Aversano and Digital artist Xcopy. Who, of course, are a big part of Cozomo de’ Medici’s collection.

To finish, de’ Medici goes all in. “We are the market makers now. We create our own museums. We decide which art defines this generation. We are the digital renaissance.”

The reactions have been mixed. Some people don’t buy it, some people think Cozomo de’ Medici is a genius. In what camp are you? Are you convinced or nah? Is Cozomo exaggerating for effect? Or does he or she really believe that? Is Cozomo ahead of his or her time or clinically insane? And, more importantly…

Who’s Cozomo de’ Medici?

No, he’s not Snoop Dogg. That was a publicity stunt that worked too well and even journalists still believe.

To answer the title’s question, let’s quote the publication that started this whole mess. In Artnet NFT 30, they introduce him as follows:

“Ever since the mysterious collector behind this Twitter handle emerged on the scene in August, they’ve captivated the cryptorati with a combination of gnomic utterances and sage NFT investment advice, all packaged under a playful identity claiming a parallel between the famous patronage of Renaissance Florence’s Medici family (albeit with a tweaked spelling seemingly borrowed from Seinfeld’s Kramer) and Cozomo’s own pursuits in the digital art world today.”

Related Reading | Christie’s Will Auction Original Art From Gary Vee ‘s Veefriends NFT Collection

And about his collection, a huge part of this story, Artnet says:

“With astonishing speed, Cozomo acquired a collection of Art Blocks and CryptoPunks alongside NFTs by Justin Aversano, Tom Sachs, and a host of other artists. He now owns hundreds of artworks, including coveted examples that the crypto community calls “holy grails,” that are together valued in the tens of millions of dollars— including what he calls a “grail of grails,” XCOPY’s Right-click and Save As guy,”

The estimation is that his whole collection is worth $17M approximately. Take that for what it’s worth.

Featured Image from Cozomo de’ Medici's Twitter page | Charts by TradingView

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Art Blocks NFTs Raised $23.5M For Charity in August

Key Takeaways

  • Art Blocks artists donated $23.5 million to charity in August.
  • Rich Lord’s Geometry Runners raised the most money, donating over $3.4 million.
  • As new generative art continues to command higher and prices, the amount donated to charities will also increase.




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Artists on the NFT platform Art Blocks have raised an estimated $23.5 million for charity in August alone, putting the total funds raised through the project at over $26 million. 

Art Blocks Artists Donate

Demand for on-chain art is blowing up, and charities are reaping the benefits.

NFTs on the Art Blocks platform have collectively raised $23.5 million for charity over the past month. In comparison, all Art Blocks projects released in the three months prior only raised $2.3 million. 


A total of 25 artists launched NFTs on the platform in August. Before each project goes live, Art Blocks and the artist agree on what percentage of the funds raised will be donated to charity. For most projects, artists donate between 10 and 25% of the total sales of the art. 

Curated project Geometry Runners, which launched Aug. 27, took the top spot, donating over $3.4 million. The project’s artist, Rich Lord, split the money between the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation and the Coalition for Rainforest Nations.

Geometry Runners Art Blocks
An example of Geometry Runners art. Source: OpenSea


Art Blocks projects are currently released through a Dutch auction format, where the price to mint starts high and drops every 5 minutes until all pieces are sold. However, Geometry Runners sold out of all 1000 NFTs at the starting price of 5 ETH, with gas prices soaring as collectors scrambled to mint pieces from the highly-anticipated collection. 

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Other projects to raise large amounts for charity in August include Trossets by Anna Carreras and Beatboxes by Zeblocks.

Since its launch in November last year, Art Blocks has become one of the premier destinations for NFT art collectors. Early projects such as Chromie Squiggle and Ringers could be minted for 0.08 ETH at launch but can now sell for millions of dollars on the secondary market. 

Art Blocks has since increased the cost to mint pieces, with some projects now starting their Dutch auctions at an eye-watering 15 ETH. While such high starting bids might price out many potential buyers, the result is a lot more money gets donated to charity, as was the case with Geometry Runners.

Disclaimer: At the time of writing this feature, the author owned BTC, ETH, and several other cryptocurrencies. 

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Three Arrows Capital execs launch NFT fund

Executives hailing from Singapore-based fund manager, Three Arrows Capital (3AC), have launched a fund focused on collecting premium digital art in the form of nonfungible tokens (NFTs).

The fund, dubbed Starry Night Capital, was founded by Three Arrows Capital’s CEO, Su Zhu, 3AC co-founder, Kyle Davies, and the pseudonymous NFT collector, Vincent Van Dough.

Van Dough announced the fund via an Aug. 31 tweet, stating: “Our thesis is simple, we believe the best way to gain exposure to the cultural paradigm shift being ushered in by NFTs is owning the top pieces from the most desired sets.”

Zhu shared the tweet, adding: “Excited to make history together.”

3AC is a digital asset-focussed fund manager that was founded in 2012. The firm has made investments in leading layer-one blockchains including Ethereum, Avalanche, and Polkadot, in addition to building an expansive DeFi portfolio including blueships Aave, Synthetix, and Balancer.

While details on the new fund’s roadmap are sparse at this stage, Van Dough revealed that Starry Night Capital hopes to launch a physical gallery “in a major city,” launch an NFT education portal, and explore other “community-building initiatives” by the end of the year. He added:

“The NFT space is not a zero-sum game, it is driven by strong flywheel effects and functions best when the pie is growing for all.”

Zhu, Davies, and Van Dough appear to have already teamed up to purchase nonfungible art together.

On Aug. 27, NFT enthusiast “pixelpete” tweeted that he had sold his one-of-a-kind Art Blocks NFT of Dmitri Cherniak’s artwork, Goose Ringer, to Zhu and Davies in a transaction that Van Dough brokered. The NFT is from Cherniak’s collection, Ringers — each of which was generated algorithmically on the Ethereum blockchain.

The pair paid 1,800 Ether for the token (roughly $5.8 million). However, it is unclear if Starry Night Capital will take possession of the artwork.

Van Dough’s wallet on the OpenSea marketplace also shows an impressive collection of 1,913 NFTs, including work from renowned NFT artist Pplpleasr.

Related: Three Arrows Capital CEO Su Zhu outlines his bullish thesis for Dogecoin

The community reaction to the fund’s launch on Twitter was mostly positive, with names such as Ryan Wyatt, the head of gaming at Youtube and Bankless founder David Hoffman congratulating the team.

However, user “Edgar Dubroviskiy” questioned the idea of purchasing only the “top pieces” in the NFT space, highlighting the high expense and poor liquidity of premium NFTs.