In 24 hours I will pick a random person who reposts, follows @krakenfx@arjunsethi, and replies with "Buy $DOG on Kraken" to win this @pizzaninjas (currently worth 0.011 BTC)
Preserving history, creating futures. 🧬
Klimt’s hidden layers become the seed of a generative world, inscribed on Bitcoin and emerging from the depths of the Belvedere Museum's archive.
Here’s how Viewfinder's inscription tree unfolds:
🧵👇
A Piece of Me by @ifxscript
777 pieces
Inscribed on Bitcoin
Mint: 0.0000777 BTC
Magic Eden @MEonBTC – August 15
This collection began at my mother’s sickbed, in the quiet hours between fear and hope.
Cancer was taking her. And eventually, it did.
I was barely holding on. The only place I could breathe or think clearly was this canvas.
I opened up an old source file—18 abstract forms I had sketched long ago.
I didn’t know what I was looking for. I just needed something to play with, because I was breaking.
Each piece became a reflection of that time.
Shapes drawn from grief.
Color pulled from reflection.
Motion born from survival.
This isn’t just art.
It’s a memory engine.
A technical experiment.
A monument to a woman I loved—and a self I almost lost.
I fused 17 of the 18 original forms.
Experimented with seed randomness, dynamic metadata, delegated inscription tooling.
Each iteration taught me something — about code, about control, about letting go.
This is a mirror of my healing.
And now, it lives forever on-chain.
Collabs will be starting soon 🔜
link to the collection
https://t.co/Q68bI1sjQs
🚨Giveaway 🚨
2 SPOTS OF Yuna Revelation BRC2.0 by @yuzodotxyz
To enter:
🔶 Follow @yuzodotxyz & @0xAvii1
🔶 Like & RT this post
🔶 Tag 2 friends in the comments
🔶 Drop your Taproot address
Winner announced in 24 hours
KATOSHI LAUNCHING APRIL 8!
Ready to join a community of 💎 hands, Bitcoin OGs, and top art collectors?
🗓️ April 8 · 9am PT · @MEonBTC
🖼️ Supply: 2,100
🟧 Mint Price: 0.0042 BTC
Chance to mint a Celestial, the rarest OCM asset. Previous Celestials sold for over $100K 🔥
PERSONA PART 2 - PROOF OF WORK
Everything has to be fast these days. Short, digestible, optimized for engagement. The entire system is built to reward what is easy - what releases instant dopamine without asking for anything in return. The crypto space is that impulse taken to the extreme. It's not just about speed, it's about constant novelty, endless speculation, and the promise of something just around the corner.
Persona doesn’t fit into that. This text probably doesn’t either. The work is not generative, not overly polished, not built around some promise of future utility. It exists for the same reason that all real art exists - because it had to be made. Because it reflects something essential, something that needs no justification beyond the work itself.
I've always preferred to let my work speak for itself, but this time I wanted to provide some more context on the process, the decisions and the intentions. Expecting the work alone to communicate all of this would be naive.
PROOF OF WORK
Most things in this space are built to be forgotten—consumed, flipped, discarded for whatever comes next. I wanted to see if I could create something that could hold its ground against that cycle, not by rejecting the fast-paced nature of the space outright, but by demanding effort - both in its creation and in how it’s engaged with.
From there, the first part of Persona came together instinctively, almost urgently, as if the faces were already waiting to be drawn. The 210 pieces were created in an almost mediumistic process - I didn't plan any of them, tried to shut off all conscious thought and just started drawing.
But Part 2 is different. I adjusted my approach and became a lot more deliberate. Like mining Bitcoin, it was a process of extraction - of excavating meaning from raw materials, layers of history, culture and memory. The series is built on proof of work. Not just in a computational sense, but in the sense that effort also creates value. Each piece was created by hand, in a slow and deliberate process, using intentionally simple tools.
ART FINDS A WAY
This series wasn’t made in a studio. It came together on the road, drawn in a van, which I spent years converting and which has been my home for the past 2 years as I have been traveling through North, Central, and soon South America.
There was no perfect setup, no controlled environment. The work adapted to that reality. It was made wherever I was: parked in dense cities or in remote areas. The tools were simple because they had to be - an iPad and a stylus. But limitations have a way of sharpening focus. The process became about working with what was there, adjusting to a new medium and making something real under any circumstances.
There’s something valuable about working within constraints. I spent many years only drawing on paper with a fineliner pen - no erasing, no second chances. Keeping it simple forced me to push deeper into the medium, to find meaning in mistakes, to embrace what I couldn’t control. This series isn’t so different. I worked with a single type of digital brush, which is deliberately hard to control, messy and imperfect. The limitations aren’t an obstacle; they’re the point. They push the work into places it wouldn’t have gone otherwise, forcing decisions that feel more immediate, more alive.
THE MEDIUM
Constraints don’t just shape the work - they also shape the way others interact with it. That’s why Bitcoin is the ideal medium for digital art. Just like working with a single brush forced me to make deliberate choices, the limitations of Ordinals demand a different approach, both from artists and collectors. The slow, expensive nature of it is a feature, not a flaw. It demands intentionality, the same way that working with certain physical materials does.
On most chains, digital art moves at the speed of speculation. Transactions are instant, almost free, and frictionless. That kind of environment encourages a certain behavior. Quick flipping, low conviction, and art being treated as just another shitcoin. Bitcoin resists that.
It’s not so different from the way art has functioned in the physical world. In the traditional market, buying a piece isn’t effortless. There are shipping costs, fees and hurdles. Reselling it too quickly can damage your reputation. Finding a buyer takes time. All of these barriers create a system where conviction matters, where acquiring a work is a deliberate act, not just a quick trade. Ordinals introduce a similar dynamic to digital art. The effort required discourages short-term speculation and rewards those who engage with the work seriously.
Even the file size restrictions, which some see as a limitation, are an opportunity. They demand that artists rethink their approach, experiment with new methods, and create something suited to the medium. The shift is no different than moving from charcoal to oil paint - each requires a different way of working, a different way of thinking. The best art isn’t about forcing a vision into a medium that doesn’t fit. It’s about understanding the medium, adapting to it, and letting it shape what’s possible.
WHAT IT ALL MEANS
It’s not my job to define what this series means. I don’t believe in dictating interpretations. Persona can be whatever someone wants it to be, whatever someone sees in it. The work exists on its own, independent of me. But I can share some of the ideas that went through my mind while creating it.
At its core, Persona deals with identity - the masks we wear and the roles we step into. Some of that is natural, or even necessary. We shift between different versions of ourselves depending on the circumstances. But identity can also be performative, deceptive or even a tool for manipulation. Nowhere is that more obvious than in crypto, where entire personas are built on nothing, designed to extract as much as possible before disappearing. The digital world blurs the line between authenticity and fabrication.
When creating the first part of Persona, I was mostly thinking about those external masks and about how identity fractures in today’s world, where we are overloaded with information, constant exposure and competing realities. The faces are distorted, reflecting the chaos of trying to navigate a world where it’s not always clear what’s real.
As I worked on Part 2, the focus expanded. It wasn’t just about observing these ideas in others, it also became about digging into my own influences and history. The process of choosing references to include or discard became its own kind of self-construction. It became as much about what has shaped me, what has brought me to this point and what fragments make up my own Persona, even though I didn’t set out with that intention.
This is just one way of reading it. Persona doesn’t have to be about any of this. Maybe it’s something else entirely. The meaning isn’t fixed - it depends on who is looking and what they need to find. The work is here. What it becomes is up to those who engage with it.
ART FOR ART'S SAKE
Persona isn’t trying to sell you on anything. There are none of the usual gimmicks, roadmaps or “utility”. It’s about the work, which is what “art for art’s sake” means to me. It exists for its own sake, not as a vehicle for chasing trends or looking for the next quick flip. It’s for collectors who understand that art doesn’t need an excuse to exist.
Ordinals provide the perfect medium for that kind of work - permanent, deliberate, resistant to the cycles of hype. Persona is an attempt to show what’s possible within that framework. A collection built to stand the test of time, not chase a moment.
A market in its current state makes decisions clearer. When everything is down, when mania has given way to fear, only real conviction remains. This is when meaningful collections take root, away from noise, built for those who see beyond the moment. Persona Part 2 will be released on March 18th via Magic Eden. Moves made in times like these are the ones that matter later 💥
Gm STONES SEEKERS,
Just a few days left before the release of the key informations about the STONES collection!
6,000 STONES will be available on launch day, and three mechanisms will help maximize the value of your stone:
• The "LORD.OF.THE.STONES" Rune token will be airdropped to all holders of STONES three weeks after the launch.
• STAKING STONES will allow you to earn an additional airdrop of the "LORD.OF.THE.STONES" token.
• MERGING STONES will enable you to combine two stones into one of a higher rarity level, creating a deflationary supply over time.
Staking and a Rune token will also allow holders to acquire physical artwork by renowned artists.
This is a unique mechanic on Ordinals, offering multiple opportunities for long-term value appreciation.
STONES ARE FOREVER.
Gm STONES SEEKERS,
We’re excited to unveil the Merging System.
A groundbreaking feature that lets holders combine two Common STONES to forge a new STONE of higher rarity.
This innovative deflationary mechanic gradually decreases the total supply, enhancing the scarcity of each STONE over time.
Embark on your quest for the ultimate STONE and take your first step toward becoming the LORD OF THE STONES.
STONES ARE FOREVER.
🇺🇸 "I'm Back, Bitches" Free & Fair Airdrop! 🎉
To celebrate the historic inauguration of the 47th President of the US, @realDonaldTrump, I’m thrilled to announce the launch of a 4721 piece Ordinals Collection on behalf of the $DOG Army!
$TRUMP is hype, Ordinals are forever 🧵👇