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Selling NFT paintings, the Newnan brothers made thousands.

 


Check out their work on their website.

https://nftartistsjande.com/

The best part is that they still have their original copies, which is how the two started selling this year.

 NEWNAN, Georgia Two brothers from Newnan are now touring the nation to instruct people on how to make thousands of dollars by selling digital reproductions of their artwork online.


The majority of the artwork hanging in Joey and Eric Uzar's studio has already been purchased, but they still possess the originals since they were sold as non-fungible tokens, or NFTs.

 Eleven-year-old Eric acknowledged that it can be challenging for others to grasp this relatively new idea.

For those who have never done it, it can be challenging to convey, he said.

In 2022, the brothers began to market digital reproductions of their works online, with one of Eric's going for $400.

Their mother, Parry Uzar, predicted that they would ask, "Why buy a jpeg?" "That's so ridiculous; I can just take a photo and sell it, right? That is fraud, and you are cheating, by the way."

Although Patty wasn't always on board, her children.

 It actually sold the very next day, she claimed. "We posted it based on how they described it, we snapped a picture, and put all the descriptions in," she said. And we were surprised.

On OpenSea, where cryptocurrency is the sole form of payment accepted, anyone can sell NFTs of almost anything, including paintings, poems, and music.

"Because I'm more into abstract art than realism, I like to look up to the greats like Picasso. I don't copy because doing so constitutes plagiarism, which is bad "explained he.

 The inventive Newnan brothers have made millions by selling their digital artwork.

 Joey, a 14-year-old who made the first transaction, revealed his long-term goal of becoming a comic book author.

People like it; they enjoy viewing my cartoons, he claimed.

The kids own the original artwork and the tangible copies. Additionally, the students would receive royalties from the new buyer if their clients ever choose to sell their creations.

Some artists will really set fire to their (original) copy, she claimed, and record a video of it happening.

But if their mother has anything to say about it, Eric and Joey's artwork will remain exactly where it is.

She explained that she didn't want to do that because it was her child's artwork.

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