Cuban artists blocked from once promising NFT trading sites

HAVANA (AP) — When everything seemed to be going wrong, Cuban multimedia artist Alejandro Pablo García Alarcón found a solution in what some might consider an unusual place: NFTs.

Artists like him have been dealt several blows in recent years: The pandemic wreaked havoc on Cuba’s tourism sector, sending art sales plummeting. US sanctions, although not explicitly aimed at art, made it more difficult for Cubans to sell their works. And for artists whose work can cross over into political commentary, like García Alarcón’s, it can be difficult to be featured in Cuban galleries.

NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are digital images recorded on a blockchain and usually purchased with cryptocurrencies. They offer artists like García Alarcón a rare loophole because they can profit from their art on an international stage with few speech restrictions due to the decentralized nature of the medium.

“The first thing that drew me to it was the freedom,” said García Alarcón, best known by his stage name, Paolo De. “You can commercialize your work without intermediaries, without having to pass through a filter.”

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