Following a sold-out Genesis NFT drop by Hein Gravenhorst this summer, elementum is delighted to announce two new NFTs by the German artist to be released on our platform this upcoming Friday, 28th of October, at 5 p.m. CEST.
One of the two upcoming NFTs is called “flowerflow” and Hein Gravenhorst entered into an artistic cooperation with the Berlin based film cutter bndberlin.
HEIN GRAVNEHORST
"flowerflow”, 2016
ERC 721 minted in 2022
mp4 (3 min 16 sec)
Unique
$2,500
HEIN GRAVNEHORST
“translation-0004-1,5”, 2022
ERC 721
mp4 (6 min 48 sec)
Edition of 3
$650
*Please make sure that you create an account on elementum.art
About Hein Gravenhorst
Hein Gravenhorst (b. 1937) is the co-founder of the Generative Photography movement and has exhibited in major digital art exhibitions in the dawn of computer art, such as “New Tendencies IV” in Zagreb in 1968 and the “Wege zur Computerkunst” show in 1970. Gravenhorst’s artworks can be found in many prominent art collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. His artworks resemble the Op Art movement of his contemporaries, like Bridget Riley, and show proximity to the psychedelic visual effects and counterculture movement of the 1960s.
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Following a sold-out Genesis NFT drop by Hein Gravenhorst this summer, elementum is delighted to announce two new NFTs by the German artist to be released on our platform this upcoming Friday, 28th of October, at 5 p.m. CEST.
One of the two upcoming NFTs is called “flowerflow” and Hein Gravenhorst entered into an artistic cooperation with the Berlin based film cutter bndberlin.
HEIN GRAVNEHORST
"flowerflow”, 2016
ERC 721 minted in 2022
mp4 (3 min 16 sec)
Unique
$2,500
HEIN GRAVNEHORST
“translation-0004-1,5”, 2022
ERC 721
mp4 (6 min 48 sec)
Edition of 3
$650
*Please make sure that you create an account on elementum.art
About Hein Gravenhorst
Hein Gravenhorst (b. 1937) is the co-founder of the Generative Photography movement and has exhibited in major digital art exhibitions in the dawn of computer art, such as “New Tendencies IV” in Zagreb in 1968 and the “Wege zur Computerkunst” show in 1970. Gravenhorst’s artworks can be found in many prominent art collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. His artworks resemble the Op Art movement of his contemporaries, like Bridget Riley, and show proximity to the psychedelic visual effects and counterculture movement of the 1960s.
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