The startup applies this innovative technology that provides security to digital goods transactions between artists and collectors Bakarts.
The Donostia-based company Bakarts seeks to be a meeting point for creators and collectors: the place where the former have the opportunity to exhibit their works of digital art and where the latter can acquire them in NFT format. The purchasing process is carried out in a very similar way to any e-commerce, carrying out the transaction using euros and with a credit card.
“Once the purchase process is completed and the order is received, we take care of sending the NFT to the Metamask Wallet of the Polygon network, it is verified and we notify the customer once it is finished,” the startup details.
At Bakarts they are clear that their main objective is to help artists, galleries and cultural organizations “take advantage of the opportunities that blockchain technologies offer them.” Among these new avenues, new business opportunities stand out, the possibility of creating a community, as well as building public loyalty. “We also want the art-loving public to be able to benefit from the advantages that these technologies offer them,” they add.
To do this, they offer selected works through galleries associated with Bakarts and a secure and transparent purchasing process that allows the user to have instant invoices, as well as a conventional payment system in euros that simplifies the operations of this type of digital assets. “To these benefits we add a sustainable technology that consumes fewer resources for the creation of NFTs.”
Among the organizations and events that have been able to benefit from Bakarts' technological services, the Jazzaldia of San Sebastián stands out, which launched a limited edition of 57 units of its poster 'Jazzaldiaren besarkada', the work of Ane Pikaza, and which could be obtained in NFT format . “Our project wants to emphasize the intrinsic value of artistic creation and treat technology as what it is: a tool,” Bakarts concludes.