Jan van Eyck
1434
"Arnolfini Portrait" by Jan van Eyck, 1434. A work of stunning detail, especially considering the period.
It demonstrated how meticulous observation and oil technique could be elevated into a central artistic purpose, an approach that deeply influenced Leonardo's own pursuit of realism, light, and the faithful study of nature.
The painting was signed with the Latin phrase, "Johannes de eyck fuit hic 1434" translating to "Jan van Eyck was here 1434".
The contents of each NFT consists of two core digital components, both of which are available below. For a deeper understanding of how these assets function as an NFT, please refer to the Education section.
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Buyout prices are based on the Reference Value of the original artwork, from which NFT pricing have been derived. Item offered as Digital Collectible. Resale not guaranteed. For more information on employed methodology and key considerations, please refer to our Pricing page.
Reference Value of Original Artwork (for context only): 150,000,000 USD.
Buyout price: 31,091 XRP
Resale value is uncertain and secondary-market liquidity is not guaranteed.
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The NFT can be viewed and interacted with across several platforms:
Specifically, the information at this address - The NFT Metadata - contains the NFT's name, artist, description, issuer, and the content address of The Digital Image, which is likewise retrievable through the IPFS, in the same fashion.
Minting was done through an XRP Ledger minting platform provided by Aesthetes, the popular XRPL NFT platform for contemporary artists.
This work is believed to be in the public domain in the United Kingdom on the basis that the creator died more than 70 years ago, and no other known restrictions apply under applicable copyright law.
This work is believed to be in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1930.
Consistent with the position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation, we affirm that faithful digital reproductions of two-dimensional public domain artworks are themselves in the public domain.
To explore the full basis for this work's public domain designation, see the relevant entry on Wikimedia Commons.
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