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forevery
Nathaniel Stern, 2024on Prohibition
Platforms
Prohibition
Description

a 24-hour Blockchain-based performance

I can give you “forever” right now;
but I can’t give you “right now” forever.
Promises that can’t be kept, however,
are often the only promises worth making.

I have a deep respect for Time.
A deep loathing, too.
Forever is cynical and mundane and devastatingly romantic in its
impossible commitment.

Forever is potential itself, always promised and never fully filled.
Time without presence
is as dust.
Time, without presenting,
is worth little.
Time is all that we can give, everything we are,
my gift to you.

– – poem by Nathaniel Stern, titled Forevery (capital F; clocks/art are lowercase)

forevery

forevery is a 24 hour performance piece, where each participant purchases a specific minute in a single day in 2024 (out of a total possible 1440 minutes), “certified” by the Blockchain. Any unsold mints after the 24 hour performance (from noon to noon across all time zones - a total of 48 hours) are “lost time” or perhaps “lost to time,” destined to be never, forever (also making the total edition number lower). Each dynamically generated, fully on-chain NFT is its own clock design, out of millions of possible combinations of frames, faces, numbers, hands, colors, rotations, textures, and more. The hour and minute hands on each face show the Time its patron now “owns,” with the second hand always in rotation. When the “real time” and your owned Time align (for example, if you own 12:27pm, then between 12:27 and 12:28 in your time zone), the NFT will animate through 1200 possible clock designs at 20 clocks per second.

keypress interactions

f to toggle Full screen w/o mouse; d to toggle time owned in Digital clock on bottom right; t to toggle owned Time (preview image) vs actual time (default, working clock); s to toggle Scrolling through clock designs as if it is the time itself; p to save the Forevery Poem to your hard drive

about

Time is something that all of us have (though never enough, it seems), but none of us own. And the Blockchain has always been a consensus-driven certification system for ownership and trans-actions, at and of specific times. It is a ledger of receipts: proof of work, stakes, time, and ownership.

But what are time and ownership without any real-world presence, or material instantiation?

Giving and selling Time itself is a promise I can’t possibly keep – just like the Blockchain’s promise of “forever” is a universal impossibility. But in many ways, the only promises worth making are those that exist in this way. Even a child knows to ask, after their story ends with a “happily ever after,” if it “really, really is forever and ever?” That said, there is nothing more romantic than an impossible promise. forevery amplifies many of the paradoxes of both Time and the Blockchain by pushing and pulling at the tensions between ownership and worth, desire and timeliness, time and being, moving and archiving, custodianship and speculation, presence and gifting.

The forevery clocks are each composed of hand-made and iPad-sketched vector layers, cleverly “disguised” on-chain as a custom font in base-64, with rarer designs including different shapes or missing components. It uses a combination of project and edition numbers to guarantee non-repeating random Times for each mint, and the palettes and designs are inspired by William Kentridge’s multi-plate prints and charcoal animations, Felix Gonzales-Torres’ (FGT’s) various Untitled clocks and candy (most notably, Perfect Lovers and Portrait of Ross), and On Kawara’s Today Series – all of them performing minimalist but emotionally charged aesthetics.

forevery celebrates, ironizes, wonders at, and agonizes over our relationships to Time, ourselves, and each other. It promises both nothing and everything: this Time is your Time, and it will last forever (or at least as long as the Blockchain exists and functions). Like ownership more generally, such possession is only what we collectively believe it to be, and how ownership is realized, too, changes over time. How might we hold on to now, forever? What would that look and feel like? It's romantic, cynical, childish, hopeful, wise, and more, and less.

Time is all that we can give, everything we are, my gift to you.