African Artists Embrace NFTs for Better Rewards

Exhibitor Cecile Fakhoury looks at an art piece displayed at the ART X fair in Lagos, Nigeria November 5, 2021. Picture taken November 5, 2021. (Reuters)
Exhibitor Cecile Fakhoury looks at an art piece displayed at the ART X fair in Lagos, Nigeria November 5, 2021. Picture taken November 5, 2021. (Reuters)
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African Artists Embrace NFTs for Better Rewards

Exhibitor Cecile Fakhoury looks at an art piece displayed at the ART X fair in Lagos, Nigeria November 5, 2021. Picture taken November 5, 2021. (Reuters)
Exhibitor Cecile Fakhoury looks at an art piece displayed at the ART X fair in Lagos, Nigeria November 5, 2021. Picture taken November 5, 2021. (Reuters)

Nigerian artist Abdulrahman Yusuf used to sell his work online but in May he was introduced to non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which he said presented “life-changing opportunities” and has increased the number of pieces he can sell at higher prices.

NFTs are a type of digital asset which use blockchain to record the ownership of items such as images, videos and other collectibles. Their roaring popularity has baffled many but the explosive growth shows no sign of abating.

And African artists like Yusuf are increasingly using NFTs, where the buyer has the status of being the official owner – a kind of digital bragging rights.

Yusuf, who lives in Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos, said he had sold 44 digital works on various NFT platforms since joining in May under the name “Arclight”.

“There are life-changing opportunities on the NFT platforms. People who have been selling their artworks for 200 (US) dollars just wake up and see their works sold for 40,000 dollars,” Yusuf, 24, told Reuters at his home studio.

The growing influence of NFTs took center stage at the four-day, annual Art X Lagos, West Africa’s premier international art fair that ended on Sunday.

Yusuf, whose work is partly inspired by pop culture and fashion, sold one piece at the fair but did not reveal the price. His most expensive piece before the fair cost 2.2 ethereum ($10,274), he said.

The founder of Art X Lagos, Tokini Peterside, said the 2021 fair involved a special NFTs sale in partnership with digital art marketplace SuperRare, the first such collaboration with an African art fair.

The fair hosted NFT artists from across Africa and its diaspora, some of whom have their works on SuperRare.

“NFTs are now bringing formidable opportunities to these artists to commercialize their work, secure their work on the blockchain, attach smart contracts to their work, which govern the way the work is sold and resold,” Peterside told Reuters.

This year’s Art X Lagos was the first full hybrid fair, combining an online and physical presence, she said.



Trump Asks US Supreme Court to Pause Law Threatening TikTok Ban

Trump was fiercely opposed to TikTok during his 2017-21 first term, but has since changed his tune - AFP
Trump was fiercely opposed to TikTok during his 2017-21 first term, but has since changed his tune - AFP
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Trump Asks US Supreme Court to Pause Law Threatening TikTok Ban

Trump was fiercely opposed to TikTok during his 2017-21 first term, but has since changed his tune - AFP
Trump was fiercely opposed to TikTok during his 2017-21 first term, but has since changed his tune - AFP

US President-elect Donald Trump filed a brief Friday urging the Supreme Court to pause a law that would ban TikTok the day before his January 20 inauguration if it is not sold by its Chinese owner ByteDance.

"In light of the novelty and difficulty of this case, the court should consider staying the statutory deadline to grant more breathing space to address these issues," Trump's legal team wrote, to give him "the opportunity to pursue a political resolution."

Trump was fiercely opposed to TikTok during his 2017-21 first term, and tried in vain to ban the video app on national security grounds.

The Republican voiced concerns -- echoed by political rivals -- that the Chinese government might tap into US TikTok users' data or manipulate what they see on the platform, AFP reported.

US officials had also voiced alarm over the popularity of the video-sharing app with young people, alleging that its parent company is subservient to Beijing and that the app is used to spread propaganda, claims denied by the company and the Chinese government.

Trump called for a US company to buy TikTok, with the government sharing in the sale price, and his successor Joe Biden went one stage further -- signing a law to ban the app for the same reasons.

Trump has now, however, reversed course.

"Now (that) I'm thinking about it, I'm for TikTok, because you need competition," he recently told Bloomberg.

"If you don't have TikTok, you have Facebook and Instagram -- and that's, you know, that's Zuckerberg."

Facebook, founded by Mark Zuckerberg and part of his Meta tech empire, was among the social media networks that banned Trump after attacks by his supporters on the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.

The ban was driven by concerns that he would use the platform to promote more violence.

Those bans on major social media platforms were later lifted.

In the brief filed on Friday, Trump's lawyer made it clear the president-elect did not take a position on the legal merits of the current case.

"President Trump takes no position on the underlying merits of this dispute," John Sauer wrote in the amicus curiae -- or "friend of the court" -- brief.

"Instead, he respectfully requests that the court consider staying the act's deadline for divestment of January 19, 2025, while it considers the merits of this case, thus permitting President Trump's incoming Administration the opportunity to pursue a political resolution of the questions at issue in the case."