Top Women NFT Artists Using Playform, in a Mostly Male Marketplace

abstract GANude_1.gif

In a predominantly male Marketplace, Playform celebrates top women NFT artists using Playform, a no-code AI.

Playform was created for artists to explore AI technology, inspire new artistic aesthetics, produce large bodies of work. Now with the advent of Cryptocurrency and the expansion of the NFT art world, artists and creators are using Playform technology to evolve a new kind of art. Many NFT artists use Playform to generate digital assets to be integrated in their visual works, including 3D, video and more.

However while the marketplace continues to expand, “the trend of male dominance has also become more apparent,” according to an article on Vogue. “Although the decentralized NFT marketplace gives equal and direct access to collectors, most of the artists making the biggest sales on the market are predominantly male.”

Playform was created for artists of all kinds to explore AI technology, inspire new artistic aesthetics, produce large bodies of work and more. We celebrate our female and female-identifying users, including users in the NFT market, to highlight their work.

View some of the top picks for women NFT artists using Playform.


 
ezgif.com-gif-maker (1).gif

Seda Turec

@sturec

Seda Turec, also known as Sturec, is a digital animator with a background in engineering and design. Born in Izmir, Turkey, the artist lived and studied in cities including Paris, Istanbul and Bangkok. Her artistic background includes design, technology, engineering, and tattoo design. She has participated in and organized exhibitions and workshops across the world, notably in Paris and Istanbul.

Sturec takes a holistic approach to her artwork, both in ideation, practice and medium. Her wide range of experiences across industries and culture has provided her with a unique approach and perspective to digital art. Her technical background often manifests in her artwork, which is often abstract in nature. As a self-proclaimed “math freak,” Sturec’s artwork is heavily influenced by geometry.

Now as a Playform Resident, Seda is working on a new exhibition incorporating Playform AI, look out for it soon!


Yeli Rodriguez

@yrdgz

NFT artist and Playform Studio Member Yeli Rodriguez has been featured on OpenSea, Rarible, and KnownOrigin. As an early user of NFTs and the Crypto art space, Yeli’s most recent body of work “abstract GANude” series, incorporates AI generation and an original sketch by the artist.

“when it comes to art: minimalism, maximalism, and everything in between. I want to create it all.”


Screen Shot 2021-03-17 at 11.10.03 AM.png

Brandi Kyle


@placeofmany

Brandi Kyle is a traditional and digital artist based in Nashville, Tennessee. Since her first cryptoart piece was published in 2018 she has expanded her art presence from the physical into the digital using pour painting textures to drive her works.

“In my Fluids in GAN Series (FIGS) I explore the creation of acrylic fluid paintings through use of the generative technology on Playform. Using a dataset of photos captured from my own fluid paintings and then carefully curating and animating these images into artworks which pulse with life.”




stainedglassseal.jpg

Anne Spalter


@aspalter7


Anne Spalter is a digital mixed media artist with work in the permanent collections of the V&A Museum; the Albright-Knox; the RISD Museum ; and others. With degrees in mathematics and painting, her influences are as diverse as Buddhist art, Jungian archetypes, and Surrealism. In addition to gallery pieces she is known for large-scale public works such as her MTA Arts 52-screen installation in the Fulton St subway in NYC in 2016.

Spalter’s castle series incorporate AI generated landscapes and AI-generated gemstones.


Previous
Previous

New Exhibition Asks What the Future of AI Might Look Like: “AI in the Image: Artificial Intelligence as Medium and Collaborator,” a Virtual Exhibit Featuring Playform Artists

Next
Next

How Crypto Artists are Using Playform AI to Scale and Augment Creative Processes