Artist Tom Sachs: 'Apple Could Never Make Anything as Shitty as the Things I Make'
The Rocket Factory NFT project stands at the intersection of crypto, the metaverse, and persistent human longing for the new frontier.
HD DownloadDo you want to build a rocket ship but don't have the deep pockets of Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, and Richard Branson?
You might want to turn to the Rocket Factory, "a trans-dimensional manufacturing plant" created by artist Tom Sachs, in which you can build and own a personalized rocket in both the physical and virtual world. The project is one of the most inventive uses of NFTs, a groundbreaking technology that makes digital items one-of-a-kind by giving them a unique code that can't be duplicated or forged. It stands at the intersection of cryptocurrency, the metaverse, and persistent human longing for the new frontier. You create a unique rocket online that gets minted as an NFT, he builds a meatspace replica and launches it, and you decide what happens next to the art.
Sachs' ongoing project makes use of the new form of digital commons called the blockchain, which is the shared public database that make it possible to prove that you and you alone own an NFT; of the metaverse, or the 3D virtual world where some believe a great deal of human interaction will soon be migrating; and of our persistent longing for a new frontier, all of which are characteristics of what is often referred to as web3—the next phase in the evolution of the internet.
Sachs is an internationally recognized artist and sculptor best known for making painstakingly realistic reproductions of familiar objects that exist in the real world. One of his most acclaimed projects, for instance, included creating a scale replica of Le Corbusier's modernist housing project The Radiant City out of foamcore. Other memorable pieces include creating a full-scale model of the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki and, in a nod to Andy Warhol, a series of shipping boxes for household items such as Kellogg's corn flakes, Brillo pads, and Heinz ketchup. Long obsessed with space flight, he has created three different "Space Program" installations, each of which represents what it means to fly to the moon, Mars, and beyond.
Reason's Nick Gillespie spoke with Sachs in his studio in Manhattan's Soho neighborhood to talk about the role of psychedelics in his creative process, how the internet has radically flattened and improved the relationship between artist and audience, and why his meticulously handcrafted NFT rockets can be just as exciting, innovative, and inspiring as the ones made by Bezos, Musk, and Branson.
Photo Credits: Budrul Chukrut / SOPA Images/Sip/Newscom; Zheng Huansong Xinhua News Agency/Newscom; Eric Draper for Virgin Galactic/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Britta Pedersen/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom; Genevieve Hanson; Tom Sachs; Aleksandra Malysheva/iStock Photo
Written and hosted by Nick Gillespie. Produced and Edited by Kevin Alexander. Shot by Daniel Schloss and Kevin Alexander.
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I can think of no better end to this thread than this comment bot
There was a TV show about this in the 70s. Some guy built his own rocket in his backyard, out of junk.
Salvage One?
Startrek first contact?
Sliders?
Astronot farmer?
From the earth to the moon?
Tommrowland?
The rocketeer?
Criminy. If I want a rocket, I expect it to carry a useful payload to a useful destination, and don't need blockchain for that.
So has not one caught on that NFTs are just a scam? Basically you use carbon sucking CPU power to verify that yes, yes indeed, this really really big number has been identified as belonging to this really really shitty digital image.
It's the digital version of tulip bulbs.
What's valuable is not the NFT, what's valuable is the image. And if the image is shitty then it doesn't matter many NFTs you tag it with, it remains shitty.
Show your credentials as an art critic.
Credentials are racist.
So, apparently, are standards, qualifications, mathematics, grammar, getting enough sleep, not getting enough sleep, and an ever-growing list. What has failed to make the list so far: the clearly racist people thinking up things that are racist.
I worked with someone who bragged about being a Communist, but not a Stalinist. She said one day that all artists should be fully subsidized by the government. I asked who decides who is an artist? She said artists. I said I am going to go around painting circles all over, call myself an artist, live free. She said that's not art. I said I'm the artist, I get to decide that. She was completely oblivious to where her logic ended up.
This is actually very easily resolved:
If you make money from your art, you are an artist. If not. you're a hobbyist and can support your hobby yourself.
Rembrandt learned you couldn't support yourself on paintings; he turned to limited-edition prints, destroying the stones after a (calculated) run.
Pretty sure Monet went out to the lily pond and painted a 'grocery-getter' when the pantry was getting slim at Giverny. 'Send Claude into town and see if we can get dinner and wine for this one'.
In the end the Communist Party gets to decide what is "art", and history shows it will be that horrible Stalinist shit.
Most people have. A "decentralized blockchain anarchist technology " that requires an authoritative central point of control to verify the NFT is real. lmao. So earth-shattering, oh my!
'Way back when the Chron was a newspaper, there was a review of a sculpture show at the De Young. One of the pieces was what was then known as 'kinetic sculpture', and at the time of the review, it wasn't functional, but was excused as 'it was done by an artist 'who shouldn't be expected to dirty hand with actual mechanical stuff'.
Bull...
Shit!
An artist should be a master of the medium; if you claim to be a poet, you had better master they language in which you write. If you 'sculpt' machines, you had better be a pretty good wrench/designer/machinist. If not, your 'art' ought to be tossed on the junk heap.
"Artist Tom Sachs: 'Apple Could Never Make Anything as Shitty as the Things I Make'"
Which medium does this bullshiter claim as his?
The idea of 'mastery of the medium' is racist.
What if the medium is your own domain?
Thinking you can have an your own domain is racist.
It is very exclusionist of him. What about the common good?
did you just say master!? You racist.
"...NFTs, a groundbreaking technology that makes digital items one-of-a-kind by giving them a unique code that can't be duplicated or forged."
That sounds like a challenge