Spotlight #3: Emonee LaRussa
There's something special about art that juxtaposes delightful visual palettes with substantive subject matter. I was first tipped off to Emonee LaRussa's work from my friend Jeff Nicholas, who shared a 2D/3D animated piece she had created (in collaboration with @johnbashyam) titled "Wanna Feel Better?" ethereum://0x3B3ee1931Dc30C1957379FAc9aba94D1C48a5405/25220 The retro vibe, handheld camera work, and perfect loop in this piece drew me in. Pretty soon, I found myself watching the ...
Spotlight #5: Akosua Viktoria
Technology alone is not enough—it's technology married with liberal arts, married with the humanities, that yields us the results that make our heart sing. Steve JobsIt is not hyperbole to say that art and science form the bedrock of culture. The two are essential to the progress and growth of the human experience in the same way the head and the heart are the thrust of our vitality and curiosity. If we believe that NFTs have staying power beyond its spotlight in the greater cultural zei...

Reintroducing Curare
After weeks of shameless self-promotion, DM-sliding, begging, and pleading, I’ve made it. I’ve received enough $WRITE to be able to create my own Mirror publication. Moving forward, Mirror will become the primary publishing platform for my publication Curare. My sincere thanks to Dan Conway, who not only graciously allowed me to pen my genesis post as a contributor on his publication but also gifted the remaining $WRITE I needed. His kind gift is a testament to the community-centric spirit I ...
Spotlight #3: Emonee LaRussa
There's something special about art that juxtaposes delightful visual palettes with substantive subject matter. I was first tipped off to Emonee LaRussa's work from my friend Jeff Nicholas, who shared a 2D/3D animated piece she had created (in collaboration with @johnbashyam) titled "Wanna Feel Better?" ethereum://0x3B3ee1931Dc30C1957379FAc9aba94D1C48a5405/25220 The retro vibe, handheld camera work, and perfect loop in this piece drew me in. Pretty soon, I found myself watching the ...
Spotlight #5: Akosua Viktoria
Technology alone is not enough—it's technology married with liberal arts, married with the humanities, that yields us the results that make our heart sing. Steve JobsIt is not hyperbole to say that art and science form the bedrock of culture. The two are essential to the progress and growth of the human experience in the same way the head and the heart are the thrust of our vitality and curiosity. If we believe that NFTs have staying power beyond its spotlight in the greater cultural zei...

Reintroducing Curare
After weeks of shameless self-promotion, DM-sliding, begging, and pleading, I’ve made it. I’ve received enough $WRITE to be able to create my own Mirror publication. Moving forward, Mirror will become the primary publishing platform for my publication Curare. My sincere thanks to Dan Conway, who not only graciously allowed me to pen my genesis post as a contributor on his publication but also gifted the remaining $WRITE I needed. His kind gift is a testament to the community-centric spirit I ...

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We are witnessing the dawn of the DAOs.
For the uninitiated, DAOs are web3’s new primitive for organizing talent and capital. DAOs unleash the power of distributed groups of people by tapping into a simple hypothesis: when people are organized under a shared purpose and motivated by ownership incentives, 1+1=11.
In the NFT space, we’ve seen numerous DAOs sprout up to apply this philosophy. DAOs like Pleasr, Fingerprints, and Flamingo aggregate and deploy capital to acquire culturally significant art. While the rapid accrual of high-value NFTs enabled many DAOs to bootstrap brand recognition and cultural relevance, it’s historically limited their impact primarily to that of value capture as opposed to value creation.
For DAOs to elevate their impact from value capture to value creation, they must evolve their role beyond collectors. While there are many directions DAOs could take, one remains most bespoke to the tenets of DAOs and promising as a sustainable model that benefits all stakeholders (the DAO, artists, and the community at large): curation.
In today's culture, curation invokes images of arranging or organizing. However, the origin story of curation and its etymology links back to the Latin root word “curare," which means “to take care of.” History's earliest curators, the Roman curatores were civil servants chartered with overseeing massive public works projects. These original curators oversaw some of history's greatest innovations (such as roads, aqueducts, and sewers, to name a few). Juxtaposing the present-day definition of curation to the role of the Roman curatore, it's clear the definition has strayed quite far away from its original notions.
Wielding the power of their networks, resources, and capital, DAOs have an opportunity to reclaim and re-align the role of curators in our culture. They are positioned to reclaim the role back from gatekeeping institutions, algorithms, and re-align the ideals of curation back to a directly contributing part of the creative process.
The Curare Framework is a simple framework that enables DAOs to work alongside artists to cultivate value—for the artist, the DAO, and the larger community. It is an idea I’ve incubated and pressure-tested as a founding member of BeetsDAO. I share it with the hopes that it will serve some utility for any DAO looking to evolve their involvement in the space. It serves as a guiding light as opposed to a prescriptive operating manual. It is meant to be tailored to the varying operating processes, governance models, and overall !vibes of a specific DAO.
To implement the framework effectively, there are some key elements the DAO should consider having in place:
Curatorial Statement: What is the story you’re looking to tell through your collection?
Collaboration Network: What people, skills, and resources are at your disposal?
Showcase Ecosystem: Where do you plan on telling your story?
Seed Funding: What is the initial funding amount?

The guiding principle behind the Curare Framework is to build a relationship between DAO and artist—one that is both creator-centric and mutually beneficial. The framework achieves this by enabling DAOs to engage with artists in 3 phases that culminate in a collaborative partnership: celebration, commission, and collaboration. The framework can be applied to a single artist or multiple artists concurrently (i.e. progressing a batch of artists at the same time) or asynchronously (i.e. progressing each artist at their own pace).

Artists are the initializers of value. They are alchemists who create something from nothing, conjuring a 1 from a 0. As such, the celebration phase entails the DAO adding a work from an artist that aligns with their curatorial narrative to their collection. By doing so, the DAO initiates a relationship with the artist that begins with a celebration of the artist’s story.
Purpose: invest in the artist’s story
Desired outcome: DAO adds a work from the artist's catalog to their collection
Artist benefit: financial gain while selling to a thoughtful collector
DAO benefit: bolster collection and curation thesis
Revenue Split: 100% artist

Whereas the initial phase focuses on celebrating the artist’s story, the commission phase emphasizes building an immutable bond between the DAO and artist. By commissioning a work, the story remains the artist’s to tell while allowing the DAO to become a character within it.
Purpose: become a character in the artist’s story
Action: collector commissions custom work for DAO’s collection
Artist benefit: Expand catalog at minimal risk
Collector benefit: make creative mark
Revenue split: 100% artist

For DAOs (and collectors writ large), there remains no higher honor than to be invited into the artist’s creative process as a co-author. This is why the collaboration phase of the framework is perhaps the most difficult yet rewarding—both creatively and financially. This phase isn’t meant to signal finality in the relationship between collector and artist but rather the beginning of a new story, told together.
Purpose: co-author a story with the artist
Desired outcome: DAO supports artist on an ambitious new work with revenue split
Artist benefit: Push creative boundaries, aided by more resources
DAO benefit: contribute creation (not just capital) to the ecosystem
Revenue split: 69% artist, 31% DAO
If you are a member of a DAO that has a desire to build more curatorial programming into your community and want help operationalizing this framework, feel free to slide into my DMs on Twitter.
We are witnessing the dawn of the DAOs.
For the uninitiated, DAOs are web3’s new primitive for organizing talent and capital. DAOs unleash the power of distributed groups of people by tapping into a simple hypothesis: when people are organized under a shared purpose and motivated by ownership incentives, 1+1=11.
In the NFT space, we’ve seen numerous DAOs sprout up to apply this philosophy. DAOs like Pleasr, Fingerprints, and Flamingo aggregate and deploy capital to acquire culturally significant art. While the rapid accrual of high-value NFTs enabled many DAOs to bootstrap brand recognition and cultural relevance, it’s historically limited their impact primarily to that of value capture as opposed to value creation.
For DAOs to elevate their impact from value capture to value creation, they must evolve their role beyond collectors. While there are many directions DAOs could take, one remains most bespoke to the tenets of DAOs and promising as a sustainable model that benefits all stakeholders (the DAO, artists, and the community at large): curation.
In today's culture, curation invokes images of arranging or organizing. However, the origin story of curation and its etymology links back to the Latin root word “curare," which means “to take care of.” History's earliest curators, the Roman curatores were civil servants chartered with overseeing massive public works projects. These original curators oversaw some of history's greatest innovations (such as roads, aqueducts, and sewers, to name a few). Juxtaposing the present-day definition of curation to the role of the Roman curatore, it's clear the definition has strayed quite far away from its original notions.
Wielding the power of their networks, resources, and capital, DAOs have an opportunity to reclaim and re-align the role of curators in our culture. They are positioned to reclaim the role back from gatekeeping institutions, algorithms, and re-align the ideals of curation back to a directly contributing part of the creative process.
The Curare Framework is a simple framework that enables DAOs to work alongside artists to cultivate value—for the artist, the DAO, and the larger community. It is an idea I’ve incubated and pressure-tested as a founding member of BeetsDAO. I share it with the hopes that it will serve some utility for any DAO looking to evolve their involvement in the space. It serves as a guiding light as opposed to a prescriptive operating manual. It is meant to be tailored to the varying operating processes, governance models, and overall !vibes of a specific DAO.
To implement the framework effectively, there are some key elements the DAO should consider having in place:
Curatorial Statement: What is the story you’re looking to tell through your collection?
Collaboration Network: What people, skills, and resources are at your disposal?
Showcase Ecosystem: Where do you plan on telling your story?
Seed Funding: What is the initial funding amount?

The guiding principle behind the Curare Framework is to build a relationship between DAO and artist—one that is both creator-centric and mutually beneficial. The framework achieves this by enabling DAOs to engage with artists in 3 phases that culminate in a collaborative partnership: celebration, commission, and collaboration. The framework can be applied to a single artist or multiple artists concurrently (i.e. progressing a batch of artists at the same time) or asynchronously (i.e. progressing each artist at their own pace).

Artists are the initializers of value. They are alchemists who create something from nothing, conjuring a 1 from a 0. As such, the celebration phase entails the DAO adding a work from an artist that aligns with their curatorial narrative to their collection. By doing so, the DAO initiates a relationship with the artist that begins with a celebration of the artist’s story.
Purpose: invest in the artist’s story
Desired outcome: DAO adds a work from the artist's catalog to their collection
Artist benefit: financial gain while selling to a thoughtful collector
DAO benefit: bolster collection and curation thesis
Revenue Split: 100% artist

Whereas the initial phase focuses on celebrating the artist’s story, the commission phase emphasizes building an immutable bond between the DAO and artist. By commissioning a work, the story remains the artist’s to tell while allowing the DAO to become a character within it.
Purpose: become a character in the artist’s story
Action: collector commissions custom work for DAO’s collection
Artist benefit: Expand catalog at minimal risk
Collector benefit: make creative mark
Revenue split: 100% artist

For DAOs (and collectors writ large), there remains no higher honor than to be invited into the artist’s creative process as a co-author. This is why the collaboration phase of the framework is perhaps the most difficult yet rewarding—both creatively and financially. This phase isn’t meant to signal finality in the relationship between collector and artist but rather the beginning of a new story, told together.
Purpose: co-author a story with the artist
Desired outcome: DAO supports artist on an ambitious new work with revenue split
Artist benefit: Push creative boundaries, aided by more resources
DAO benefit: contribute creation (not just capital) to the ecosystem
Revenue split: 69% artist, 31% DAO
If you are a member of a DAO that has a desire to build more curatorial programming into your community and want help operationalizing this framework, feel free to slide into my DMs on Twitter.
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