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As more and more artists and collectors turn to NFTs - museums are starting to take notice. Digital artworks offer museums new opportunities and new challenges.
France's Centre Pompidou of modern and contemporary art, acquired from 13 renowned French and international artists, including Bruce Nauman and Bill Viola. This marks the first NFT acquisition by a major French public museum, with support from the French Ministry of Culture and Pompidou’s director, Xavier Rey.
Vienna's Belvedere Palace Museum , each a reproduction of the masterpiece, at the time for €1,850 or 0.65 ETH. Each tile is an inimitable piece of the painting, with NFT certificates showing the exact part purchased.
The Los Angeles Country Museum of Art joins this growing list with a notable collection of 22 digital artwork pieces Among the pieces is the highly sought-after CryptoPunks NFT #3831, previously sold for $2.1 million worth of ETH in 2021.
Last but not least, Florence's Uffizi Gallery sold NFTs of its art to raise funds. An encrypted Michelangelo painting of the holy family, Doni Tondo, sold for €140,000. Each piece includes a signed certificate of authenticity by the museum’s director, Eike Schmidt.