All proceeds from the sale will go to OCEANA's Anti-Plastic Campaigns
The oceans face a massive and growing threat from something you encounter every day: plastics. An estimated 33 billion pounds of plastic pollution enter the oceans every year—that’s roughly equivalent to dumping two garbage trucks full of plastic into the oceans every minute. The results are devastating for marine ecosystems and animals, such as sea turtles, which often mistake plastic for food.
Plastic is everywhere. It’s choking our oceans, melting out of Arctic sea ice, sitting at the deepest point of the seafloor, and raining in our national parks. It’s in the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the food we eat. It’s also one of the greatest contributors to climate change and is disproportionately impacting communities of color and low-income communities.
Forty percent of the plastics currently used are single-use plastics – made from a material designed to last forever but used only for a few moments before being discarded. Unfortunately, one of the most popular solutions to plastic pollution falls far short. A meager 9% of all plastic waste generated has been recycled. We know that we can’t recycle our way out of this mess, especially as plastic production is expected to triple by 2050.
That’s why Oceana is campaigning to stop plastic pollution at the source – by passing local, state, and national policies that reduce the production and use of unnecessary single-use plastic that is flowing into our oceans, while also working with companies to move to refillable and reusable systems.
Oceana and our allies have passed policies that would eliminate the use of 1.95 million metric tons of unnecessary single-use plastic each year by 2033 (equivalent to about 195 billion plastic bottles), including many of the most common items found polluting the oceans.
Autoglyphys 101
Autoglyphs are a collection of 512 NFTs that reside on the Ethereum network using the ERC-721 token standard. They belong to the category of generative art.
There are 512 Autoglyphs in total. Each Autoglyph is unique.
This Autoglyph (#30) is one of the 128 Larva Labs’ pieces they originally minted (created) in 2019 and is stored in their wallet. The NFT will be transferred from their wallet directly in order to preserve provenance.
Larva Labs is a creative team known for developing digital art projects including Cryptopunks, Autoglyphs and Meebits.
Autoglyphs’ code is stored on Ethereum Blockchain, a global decentralised online platform that keeps a secure and permanent record of each artwork, making it impossible to fake or duplicate ownership.
Ownership of each Autoglyph is public information displayed on the Ethereum blockchain.
Unlike the usual NFT artwork data that is stored on a server, Autoglyphs’ code is embedded in the smart contract on the blockchain and can be generated at any time.
Each Autoglyph is created by using characters or “glyphs” from a set of symbols. Across the collection, there are 10 Symbol Sets. Symbol Set 1 is the most common with Symbol Set 10 being the rarest.
There are only 8 Autoglyphs with Symbol Set 10 making the full collection (one of each Symbol Set) highly sought after.
Catalogue Notes
In 2017, Matt Hall and John Watkinson, software developers and founders of the New York-based company Larva Labs, created a program that would generate thousands of unique digital characters, each linked to a smart contract on the Ethereum blockchain. These characters, ranging from humans to zombies, apes, and aliens, became known as CryptoPunks, a crude yet eclectic cast of misfits that posed a profound question: Could a few lines of code translate into meaningful ownership and authenticity in art?
Today, the launch of CryptoPunks is seen as a watershed moment in digital art and the history of NFTs (non-fungible tokens). CryptoPunks became the blueprint for the NFT movement, reshaping the digital art market and challenging traditional notions of “ownership” in art.
Despite their success with CryptoPunks, one detail evaded Hall and Watkinson. Although discussions of permanence and provenance on the blockchain were central to the project, the actual artwork for CryptoPunks was stored off-chain as an external image file. Determined to create algorithmically generated art that was entirely self-sustaining—independent of platforms, marketplaces, or external websites—they conceived the idea for Autoglyphs.
However, one major obstacle stood in their way: the Ethereum blockchain was not designed to store large amounts of data. Despite these technical limitations, Hall and Watkinson released Autoglyphs in April 2019, marking the first fully on-chain generative art project.
For Hall and Watkinson, the development of Autoglyphs was a return to the roots of the digital art movement. “We definitely needed to clamp down the parameters pretty hard because of the technical requirements, but we’d been getting into the early pioneering digital art of the ’60s and early ’70s stuff," Watkinson explained in a 2019 interview with Artnome. "It's definitely an homage to Michael Noll and Ken Knowlton and that kind of stuff, which we really love. Only once we got to this digital art world via the CryptoPunks did we really realize how much of all this stuff had been explored in the ’60s. It’s almost humbling how much ground was covered so quickly in digital art in the ’60s and early ’70s.”
The Autoglyphs software was designed to produce 512 unique artworks, each composed of a defined set of ‘glyphs.’ Each glyph is represented by ASCII characters (such as x, /, , +, |, and –). Across the collection 10 distinct series of glyphs exist. These series, known as Symbol Sets, are the building blocks which allow the algorithm to generate a unique, abstract visual pattern that comprises the artwork for each Autoglyph. For die-hard collectors, acquiring all 10 symbol sets is the holy grail of crypto collecting, and, due to the rarity of some of the sets, a difficult task to achieve.
Composed of black-and-white lines, circles and squares, the resulting image is both minimal and conceptual in nature. And, while despite representing another landmark moment in digital art history, Autoglyphs remain deeply rooted in the art of the not-so-distant past — a natural stepping stone in the forward-moving trajectory of art history.
Though the visual style may evoke comparisons to Piet Mondrian, Autoglyphs are inextricably linked to the conceptual art of Sol LeWitt. While the generator itself exists within the smart contract, allowing the artwork to fully live on-chain, the smart contract also provides drawing instructions that allow owners of Autoglyphs to recreate their glyph outside of the blockchain.
Though these instructions arose out of necessity to generate image files for user convenience, in their interview with Artnome Watkinson explained, “…in the source code for the actual smart contract, if you scroll down a little bit below that big ASCII art ‘Autoglyphs,’ you'll see that there are these little instructions. For every ASCII art character, it tells you how to draw it. We generate image files that way. But the idea is that anyone can generate it—kind of like a Sol LeWitt instruction set for creating a drawing.”
Like LeWitt, who relied on others to execute his conceptual works based on written instructions, Larva Labs removed the artist’s hand from the creative process, prioritizing the idea of the artwork over the act of creation itself.
The genesis for the idea stemmed from duo encountering LeWitt’s work at the Whitney Museum of American Art. “There was this big Sol LeWitt piece, and they were explicit about how this piece had been executed by an assistant at the gallery, but that's in keeping with the intention of the artwork and the instructions of the artist,” Hall expanded to Artnome. “We thought that was good, it was perfect, because we can't do a lot of things we want to do directly on the blockchain, but we can have the spirit of it be completely self-contained.”
Autoglyphs mark a significant evolution in the history of art, blending the minimalist rigor of 20th-century conceptualism with the boundless possibilities of 21st-century technology. As the first fully on-chain generative art project, they serve as a bridge between past and future, anchoring digital art in the traditions of conceptual pioneers while charting a path forward for artists working at the intersection of art and code.