Beautiful Virgin Islands

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025

NFTs had a breakthrough year – What’s next for them?

NFTs had a breakthrough year – What’s next for them?

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) drove 2021’s most-hyped art sales, but the tech underpinning them raises environmental and long-term value concerns.

When Canadian artist Trevor Jones graduated 14 years ago from the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland, he was quickly confronted by the harsh realities of the art world.

“I had some decent exhibitions and gallery shows,” he told Al Jazeera. “But it was no way to pay the bills. I was working three different jobs at the time.”

In the early 2010s, he got interested in the intersection between technology and art, and started experimenting with QR codes and augmented reality. These themes received a lukewarm response from the established art world, but he pushed on. In 2017 he invested in the rising cryptocurrency Bitcoin, promptly losing his money in the 2018 crash.

“I found out I was a much better painter than an investor,” he joked. “But it opened up a whole new world that I could explore through painting.”

Since then he has been making cryptocurrency-themed works, mixing classical painting and crypto themes, often with digital art pieces attached to them in the form of non-fungible tokens (NFTs).

NFTs are unique digital files underpinned by blockchain technology – the same tech that anchors Bitcoin – and the blockchain ledger they sit on verifies who the rightful owner is of that one-of-a-kind digital asset, giving it a provenance.

Demand for NFTs started taking off late last year, with interest in them exploding this year – along with Jones’s fortunes.

His first NFT project sold in 2019 for $10,000 – a huge amount of money at the time. In October 2020, he sold an NFT of Batman together with comic book artist José Delbo for $552,000. Then this February, he sold 4,158 editions of his most famous work, Bitcoin Angel, which mixes Bernini’s The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa with crypto imagery, for $3.2m.

“When you’re a poor, struggling painter you just want to sell your work to pay rent and put some food on the table,” Jones said. “It’s a struggle to be creative under those conditions. Now I’m in a position to do a collaboration with Ice Cube.”

Pixels and provenance


NFTs have supported this year’s most-hyped art sales.

The opening shot for the gold rush was fired in March, when United States-based artist Mike Winkelmann, also known as Beeple, sold an NFT of his digital artwork Everydays: The First 5000 Days, for a whopping $69m at auction house Christie’s.

Christie’s also partnered with NFT trading platform OpenSea at the end of November to cash in on the trend. Celebrities such as Paris Hilton, Snoop Dogg and Lindsay Lohan and even World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee made and sold NFTs this year.

Another major trend unfolded with avatar-like portrait drawings sold as NFTs. The most popular project in the space is called CryptoPunks. At the time of this writing, the lowest-priced CryptoPunk could be bought for $242,918, while the most expensive carried a price tag of $7.58m.

The Bored Ape Yacht Club, which boasts celebrity members including Jimmy Fallon and Steph Curry, saw a bundle of 101 NFTs resell at auction at Sotheby’s for $24.4m in September.

Beyond the bragging rights of being on the cutting edge of a new crypto trend, investors are also willing to wager on the idea that pixels with an attached provenance will continue to be desirable collectibles.

“When you make an NFT there’s always a limited number of them,” Yan Ketelers, CMO at Venly, a Belgian startup that builds NFT marketplaces, told Al Jazeera. “Whenever you sell them, it gets registered on a blockchain.”

A gallery assistant at London’s House of Fine Art (HOFA) Gallery in the United Kingdom holds a smartphone displaying a signed lithograph ‘Sealed Cryptopunk #207’ by Larva Labs


These NFTs can in turn be sold by their owners, creating a fertile ground for trade on NFT marketplaces like OpenSea or Nifty Gateway.

But while NFTs benefit from the property rights bestowed by the blockchain, they also suffer from the technology’s hefty carbon footprint.

Most blockchain networks rely on so-called miners whose rigs – often comprised of thousands of energy-guzzling computers – race to solve complex math puzzles, with the winner being rewarded with cryptocurrency.

The Ethereum blockchain, on which most NFTs are registered, currently uses more energy than the entire country of the Philippines. “This digital system has a huge impact in the real world,” said Alex de Vries, owner of Digiconomist, a site that calculates the energy use of blockchain networks like Ethereum.

In his day job, de Vries is also a member of the financial crimes unit of the Dutch central bank. “That’s not what we want in the age of climate change, when we’re supposed to lower our emissions,” he said.

But for blockchain proponents, this is a transitory problem. According to Ketelers, miners are quickly moving to sources of clean energy, and blockchain systems are experimenting with new ways of doing business. Venly for example often uses Polygon, a network that is still built on top of Ethereum, but uses a system that would cut up to 99 percent of the energy use of the so-called proof of work systems described earlier.

“I don’t think the environmental critique still makes a lot of sense,” said Ketelers.

Yet according to de Vries, the problem hasn’t been solved yet. More eco-friendly blockchain networks do exist, but the bigger ones like Ethereum are still energy guzzlers. Ethereum has also been wanting to move away from proof of work for years, but has been unsuccessful so far.

And while sceptics may dismiss NFTs as a fad, evangelists argue that the “metaverse” – a vague term used to describe a more immersive future version of the internet populated by avatars – is poised to push them into the mainstream through applications such as video games, Venly’s main business.

“Imagine that everything you build or buy in a game becomes your property,” said Ketelers. “It becomes part of your identity, and you can even sell the assets.”

That is already happening to a degree. The market for game skins, cosmetic upgrades for in-game items such as guns, reached $30bn in 2018, according to Juniper Research. Yet with NFTs, players could really own these items, independent of game developers, and even start trading them on third-party marketplaces – which could allow burgeoning virtual economies to rise up.

Venly supports game developers like Atari with ideas like this.

But like crypto bubbles past, the NFT hype might also collapse in the future. “I learned how fast things can take off in the crypto world, but also how fast they can crash,” said Jones. “Bitcoin has been called dead many times in the past few years, but it just keeps rising up like a phoenix.”

This is why Jones is preparing for volatility. He hasn’t bought anything extravagant with his newfound wealth, just a new car (albeit a Tesla). And next year he is renting out Stirling Castle in Scotland to host a party for the collectors who own his art – a luxury in some ways, but one he sees as good business.

“I need to grow my brand and community to survive the eventual bear market,” he said. “There will be a lot of artists who will disappear, and projects that will go to zero. Everybody knows it. But some artists will succeed and come out the other end. I hope I will be one of them.”

Newsletter

Related Articles

Beautiful Virgin Islands
0:00
0:00
Close
Pope Leo Warns of Societal Crisis Over Mega-CEO Pay, Citing Tesla’s Proposed Trillion-Dollar Package
Poland Green-Lights NATO Deployment in Response to Major Russian Drone Incursion
Elon Musk Retakes Lead as World’s Richest After Brief Ellison Surge
U.S. and China Agree on Framework to Shift TikTok to American Ownership
London Daily Podcast: London Massive Pro Democracy Rally, Musk Support, UK Economic Data and Premier League Results Mark Eventful Weekend
This Week in AI: Meta’s Superintelligence Push, xAI’s Ten Billion-Dollar Raise, Genesis AI’s Robotics Ambitions, Microsoft Restructuring, Amazon’s Million-Robot Milestone, and Google’s AlphaGenome Update
Le Pen Tightens the Pressure on Macron as France Edges Toward Political Breakdown
Musk calls for new UK government at huge pro-democracy rally in London, but Britons have been brainwashed to obey instead of fighting for their human rights
Elon Musk responds to post calling for the murder of Erika Kirk, widow of Charlie Kirk: 'Either we fight back or they will kill us'
Czech Republic signs €1.34 billion contract for Leopard 2A8 main battle tanks with delivery from 2028
USA: Office Depot Employees Refused to Print Poster in Memory of Charlie Kirk – and Were Fired
Proposed U.S. Bill Would Allow Civil Suits Against Judges Who Release Repeat Violent Offenders
Penske Media Sues Google Over “AI Overviews,” Claiming It Uses Journalism Without Consent and Destroys Traffic
Indian Student Engineers Propose “Project REBIRTH” to Protect Aircraft from Crashes Using AI, Airbags and Smart Materials
French Debt Downgrade Piles Pressure on Macron’s New Prime Minister
US and UK Near Tech, Nuclear and Whisky Deals Ahead of Trump Trip
One in Three Europeans Now Uses TikTok, According to the Chinese Tech Giant
Could AI Nursing Robots Help Healthcare Staffing Shortages?
NATO Deploys ‘Eastern Sentry’ After Russian Drones Violate Polish Airspace
Anesthesiologist Left Operation Mid-Surgery to Have Sex with Nurse
Tens of Thousands of Young Chinese Get Up Every Morning and Go to Work Where They Do Nothing
The New Life of Novak Djokovic
The German Owner of Politico Mathias Döpfner Eyes Further U.S. Media Expansion After Axel Springer Restructuring
Suspect Arrested: Utah Man in Custody for Charlie Kirk’s Fatal Shooting
In a politically motivated trial: Bolsonaro Sentenced to 27 Years for Plotting Coup After 2022 Defeat
German police raid AfD lawmaker’s offices in inquiry over Chinese payments
Turkish authorities seize leading broadcaster amid fraud and tax investigation
Volkswagen launches aggressive strategy to fend off Chinese challenge in Europe’s EV market
ChatGPT CEO signals policy to alert authorities over suicidal youth after teen’s death
The British legal mafia hit back: Banksy mural of judge beating protester is scrubbed from London court
Surpassing Musk: Larry Ellison becomes the richest man in the world
Embarrassment for Starmer: He fired the ambassador photographed on Epstein’s 'pedophile island'
Manhunt after 'skilled sniper' shot Charlie Kirk. Footage: Suspect running on rooftop during panic
Effective Protest Results: Nepal’s Prime Minister Resigns as Youth-Led Unrest Shakes the Nation
Qatari prime minister says Netanyahu ‘killed any hope’ for Israeli hostages
King Charles and Prince Harry Share First In-Person Moment in 19 Months
Starmer Establishes Economic ‘Budget Board’ to Centralise Policy and Rebuild Business Trust
France Erupts in Mass ‘Block Everything’ Protests on New PM’s First Day
Poland Shoots Down Russian Drones in Airspace Violation During Ukraine Attack
Brazilian police say ex-President Bolsonaro had planned to flee to Argentina seeking asylum
Trinidad Leader Applauds U.S. Naval Strike and Advocates Forceful Action Against Traffickers
Kim Jong Un Oversees Final Test of New High-Thrust Solid-Fuel Rocket Engine
Apple Introduces Ultra-Thin iPhone Air, Enhanced 17 Series and New Health-Focused Wearables
Macron Appoints Sébastien Lecornu as Prime Minister Amid Budget Crisis and Political Turmoil
Supreme Court temporarily allows Trump to pause billions in foreign aid
Charlie Sheen says his father, Martin Sheen, turned him in to the police: 'The greatest betrayal possible'
Vatican hosts first Catholic LGBTQ pilgrimage
Apple Unveils iPhone 17 Series, iPhone Air, Apple Watch 11 and More at 'Awe Dropping' Event
Pig Heads Left Outside Multiple Paris Mosques in Outrage-Inducing Acts
Nvidia’s ‘Wow’ Factor Is Fading. The AI chip giant used to beat Wall Street expectations for earnings by a substantial margin. That trajectory is coming down to earth.
×