EUQINOM Gallery is partnering with Quantum, the first curated on-chain platform dedicated to NFT photography, to release Klea McKenna’s first NFT collection, No Feeling is Final.
Mint Location: https://www.quantum.art/collection/no-feeling-is-final
Drop Date: Thursday, Jan 13th, 2022
Drop Time: 9:00AM PST / Noon EST / 5:00PM GMT
Number of pieces: 140 total mint size. Each piece is a 1/1 NFT
Drop Model: Dutch auction, starting at 1 eth and declining to a resting price of 0.25 eth. (Dutch Auction starts at 1 ETH and declines every block until reaching a final resting price. If the price drops during your transaction, you will be refunded the difference by the smart contract.)
Donations: 2.5% of sales go to carbon offset and 2.5% to Madre.org a global women’s rights organization.
Please Note:
You must use ethereum to purchase. Quantum’s NFT collections typically sell out within minutes after the release time; we recommend adding funds to your Coinbase wallet in advance to guarantee the funds will be actively available when sales open.
Please contact us at info@euqinomgallery.com with any questions or for assistance setting up your Coinbase wallet.
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About the Series:
In No Feeling is Final, I confront collective and personal loss in the face of a global pandemic through a series of handmade, cameraless photograms. This work began as an experiment in how to make photographic art while at home with two small children during the early months of the pandemic. It grew into a 44ft installation at SFMOMA in the 2021 exhibition “Close to Home” curated by Corey Keller. Now, it has evolved into my first NFT collection. Each photogram was created by saturating rag paper with fugitive inks, then exposing it to direct sunlight for weeks on the roof of my San Francisco apartment. With these unlikely materials, I document the passage of time during a shared experience of loss.
Handkerchiefs are artifacts of personal health and hygiene. They are intimate objects that someone carried and used to absorb their body’s fluids - snot, sweat and tears. In another era, offering your handkerchief was a way of expressing compassion for someone else’s suffering. As the pandemic stretched on, and its impact grew, I began to see these vibrant imprints as representing the growing crowd of those we had lost. In contrast, the handkerchiefs become ever more imperfect and corporeal – worn, dyed black to block the sun, and then faded by exposure to it. The handkerchiefs are my negatives, both the source of the images and the remains of the process – shadow skins of the portraits they made.
By their very nature, loss and change are embedded in these original artworks. Exposure to light will eventually cause the fugitive inks to fade and disappear. Transforming them into an NFT collection and scattering them widely is intended as an act of communal preservation. This collection lives at the intersection of analog photography's impermanence and NFTs immateriality -- two mediums, both initially disregarded by the larger art world, and each with a uniquely troubled relationship to what we view as “real.” By trusting a virtual artwork to outlive its physical counterpart, I point to our own temporality and the chasm we inhabit between the physical and virtual worlds.
The series title comes from a 1905 Rainer Maria Rilke poem entitled “Go to the limits of your longing” Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final. — Klea McKenna