A Night at SuperRare’s “Offline”
The buzz of Soho welcomed visitors to SuperRare’s “Offline” NFT gallery opening last night. Strategically planted on Bowery Street near the upcoming New Museum, the space practically ambushes the steady flow of art enthusiasts in this gallery-rich district.
Digital art royalty filled the room—Fvckrender, All Seeing Seneca, Reuben Wu, and others mingling through the crowd. The inaugural exhibition, “Digital Decadence: the art of falling apart,” probes what remains human in our algorithm-dominated world.
The works fixate on falling and yielding—vulnerabilities machines cannot replicate—raising questions about humanity’s place as technology encroaches further into our lives.
SuperRare has evolved cleverly since the NFT gold rush of 2021-2022. While the market sobered, they doubled down on quality curation rather than chasing volume, cultivating a selective community of artists and collectors.
Conversations frequently turned to RARE, their governance token, which has stayed remarkably stable in crypto’s choppy waters.
As the Manhattan night reclaimed the attendees, one thing became clear: SuperRare isn’t just opening a physical space—they’re forcing a dialogue between traditional art frameworks and blockchain innovation. That recent 50% spike in RARE’s value suggests many share this curiosity.
- NFT
- Blockchain