Roll Them Dice!!!

“Solarii” is a one-of-a-kind — 1/1 — virtual sculpture listed for $32,500.

Roll them dice, Casper. What I mean is, every night I make at least one virtual sculpture, and it’s as easy as when you were a kid stacking hardwood maple blocks, and what’s more, I have an art market that enables me to offer my pieces at $125 each in an edition of 22, and $32,500.00 or more for a one-of-a-kind original and, of course, they’re all signed, numbered and accompanied by a COA.

If you can grow your social media, you can easily start to turn big bucks for your artwork, regardless of what it is or what it looks like, because it’s not about your art — it’s about YOU, and about your relationship with all those who support you and approve of you, and that NEVER includes your parents, so let it go.

You can cash in bigtime on the virtual art market if you get in on the ground floor, and that’s exactly what you’re doing.

You have the Ultimate Weapon in the game — the Godd™ Engine & Editor, with which you can make anything, and maybe even SELL your art for incredible amounts of money — keep that $66,000,000.00 NFT in your sights as you put up your art pieces on eBay, etsy and others, like fine art america, artpal, amazon, storenvy, minted, society 6, casetify, zazzle, redbubble, artfinder, artplode, ugallery, saatchi art, shopify, artnet, artsy and even opensea and other NFT vending sites.

It’s easy to make a NFT from a Godd™ Orb. Just press f4 and look for the screenshots in your GODD directory, in the folder labeled “SNAPS”.

You can create a video of your sculpture using FRAPS and any video editor. I happen to use “Open Shot” which does everything I need it to do for my NFTs and my #shorts videos.

Anyhow, I always enjoyed playing with my hardwood blocks, of which there were more than 100, because my uncle was an amateur carpenter, which means he measured once and cut more than twice, so it left a lot of bits and pieces, and it was wartime — WWII — and everything, including wood blocks, was scarce.

Maybe you were a plastics blocks kid, or you never got a set of any kind of blocks, but you get the idea of playing with blocks. You put blocks on the floor or table, and you pile other blocks up on them, making shapes and stuff.

Castles are easy. When it comes to fine abstract art, things get a little more difficult and there are considerations that you throw in there, like you might not use a Raggedy Ann doll in the middle of your found-objects assemblage, but you’d be wrong to leave it out.

Assemblages were my specialty, although I did my share of portrait busts to make a buck. These virtual sculptures are assemblages of boxes stacked on each other, some slanted, some not, but it all comes down to one thing, even though it’s true that I create a bunch of virtual blocks within a 3D environment, and stack them up to make interesting shapes.

But basically, here I am, at the tender age of 80, and I’m just now getting around to doing exactly what I was doing when I came in — playing with blocks and looking for someone to change my diaper and give me a cookie.

That’s pretty much what we do in the Upper Atmospheres, too. We play with blocks, and that includes your universe, which is a single drop of water in the Real World.

Well, not actual water. And there are no cookies, not the kind you’d want to eat. As a matter of fact, eating is not encouraged in the Higher Spheres, but you already knew that. Continue reading

Virtual Sculpture is Not Digital Art

Virtual Sculpture is not digital art. Digital art is produced one way, and virtual sculpture is produced in an entirely different way.

Virtual sculpture in its purest form is an artistically stacked set of one or more boxes in a virtual environment.

It’s built, not painted, and the result is more than an image. It has BUMPABILITY, meaning that it’s got collision effects, and you can bump into it, thereby fulfilling Mata’s classic answer to a student’s question, “What is Real?”, to which she responded, “Real is whatever you bump into.” Continue reading

Something New in Art…

Many years ago, when I was about 19 years old, I decided on art as a professional career, and with the help of Lee Krasner, Elaine deKooning and others, I did rather well, with a few sales in the six-figure numbers, although just barely squeaking by on that measure.

My average softball-sized bronze sculpture went for about $350 at first, in the sixties, then gradually topping off in the $22,000.00 range in the 1980s for my larger and more complex — and therefore more expensive at the foundry — bronze sculptures, usually with onyx bases. Continue reading

How to sell Virtual Sculpture

Edition of 10 Signed Numbered ORB contained on USB Wallet Cards

Want to create and sell your virtual sculptures? The problem has always been safeguarding the software, but what if that wasn’t what was valuable? What if the USB flash drive itself was valuable ONLY because it had been SIGNED and NUMBERED by the artist?

I make my virtual sculptures in editions of 10, at least that’s the current plan.

You pay $35,000.00, you get ten signed and numbered USB Flash Drive Wallet Cards with screenshot of your sculpture and the godd orb containing your sculpture gets tucked away inside for easy access and gameplay if desired. Continue reading

Sculpture in a New World

In a world of social distancing and quarantine, architectural scale sculpture will not be at the top of the world’s shopping lists anytime soon.

If you know a few billionaires, you might survive as a sculptor, but if not, you’re doomed to turn out little plaster casts of your customers’ faces.

I have a solution. Turn out your architectural sculptures in virtual, then if a client wants the full monty, you can hire engineers to build it for them, sign a name plaque, and send it out for delivery.

You don’t have to actually build the thing. You build a “Proof of Concept” in a virtual world setting, and then you build it for real if someone actually wants it for their home or office. Continue reading

New Product Alert!!!

I have so far made only two examples of my Virtual Sculptures, a project that I started tonight, and will continue as long as there’s some interest in the subject of virtual art, and in particular, virtual sculpture that come to you housed in a fashionable wearable specialty high-speed flash drive, for the low, low price of only [INSERT PRICE HERE].

They can be collected, traded, bought and sold as a piece of jewelry containing original artwork, and that takes it out of the realm of software and into the realm of fine art.

Yep, I’ve got a new product in hand, and I want to introduce it to you. It’s quite simply a unique, one-of-a-kind virtual sculpture that can be viewed, walked around, studied and even photographed.

I keep a copy in a safe, but yours is the only copy besides mine, and that makes it unique and saleable as a collectible. Continue reading