Showing posts with label NFT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NFT. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

The Paradox of the Dualism of Being

The Paradox of the Dualism of Being

- By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima

Featuring my beautiful friend and perfectly figured model, Vivian E of my popular V for Vivian Series artworks and NFTs on the Algorand blockchain and the continuous of the series coming up on Opensea and Artprice for international exhibitions and auctions.

Sales from US$1000 and 1ETH only.

Presales available for art collections.

#Art

#artworks

#NFT

#NFTs

#series

#beauty

#beautiful

#model

#friends

#digitalart

#cryptoart

#digitalassets

#exhibitions

#auctions

#Algorand

#Opensea

#Artprice

#presales

#artcollection

#acquisition

#distribution

#dualism

#paradox

#life

#existence

#society

#Vivian


Monday, October 2, 2023

New NFTs on Midnight Angels and Brave Girls of the Night

New #NFTs

1. Midnight Angels
2. Brave Girls of the Night 1
3. Brave Girls of the Night 2
(the third and fourth will be minted tomorrow).

I have been creating NFT #series on #women showing their challenges in life from the V for Vivian series to THE MATRIX WOMAN series and today I started the Brave Girls of the Night series.

I call them Storytelling NFTs.
The "Scars of Vivian" on the true life cases of women in abusive relationships, failed marriages and domestic violence is most likely going to have a film adaptation for international release. An art collector of NFT artworks has selected it with four othes which are among my most special NFTs, including "Ethereum Rising".
I am creating these NFTs with the film adaptations on my mind.

#Vivian
#women
#relationship
#marriage
#love
#sex
#domesticviolence
#genderequality
#freedom
#storytelling
#film
#filmadaptation

View them on the Algorand #blockchain on
https://nftmyimage.com/@nigeriadaily

Thursday, September 28, 2023

The Ethereum Cube and other Artworks Inspired by Ethereum

The Ethereum Cube - #NFT in recognition of the game changer of the #blockchain. 

by @nigeriadaily on @nftmyimage. 

#ETH

#Ethereum

#NFTs

https://nftmyimage.com/9v02xMe1EFcZnXRLJZWz8Q?minted=true 

Saturday, September 23, 2023

Fine Arts and NFTs in Celebration of Nollywood Diva Rita Dominic Anosike

Celebrated Nollywood Diva, Mrs. Rita Dominic Anosike is an international star and winner of the Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) for the Best Actress in a Leading Role in 2012.













Of all her Public photographs, this one is my favourite which I have decided to convert from ordinary photography to fine arts photography; a very big part of the film industry that is worth millions of dollars in Hollywood, but totally ignored in Nollywood.  

Pop Art or Pop Photography of celebrity culture was the signature of Andy Warhol, the famous American artist and filmmaker whose monumental artwork,  "Marilyn Diptych" created in 1962 is a silkscreen painting depicting legendary Hollywood sex symbol of the silver screen, Marilyn Monroe showing 50 of the same photograph with 25 in yellow colour and 25 in black and white colour which many people came up with different assumptions in their interpretation of the artwork.  Each image of the actress is taken from the single publicity photograph of Marilyn from the film "Niagara" (1953).

Rita Dominic is not only one of e beauty queens of Nollywood, but one of the best actors in Nigeria and Africa. In celebration of her fame and accomplishments, I have made unique versions of her single photograph in fine arts photography and made the NFTs on the Algorand blockchain.

https://nftmyimage.com/@nigeriadaily

NFTs last longer than photos, videos and films that are not on the blockchain. 

The NFT will be in the decentralized InterPlanetary File System.

#RitaDominic

#RitaDominicAnosike

#Nollywood

#AMAA

#awards

#AndyWarhol

#Americanartist 

#filmmaker

 #MarilynDiptych

#silkscreen

#painting

#photograph

#photography

#PopArt

#PopPhotography

#celebrity

#culture

#Hollywood 

#sexsymbol

#MarilynMonroe 

#NFT


Thursday, September 21, 2023

New Artworks and New NFTs on Senator Ben Murray-Bruce and Segun Agbaje

Senator Ben Murray-Bruce, OON is the Founder and Chairman of The Silverbird Group. 

The Silverbird Group is a diversified multi-media company with holdings in Communication, Real Estate, and Cinemas.The company was established in 1980 by Ben Murray-Bruce. The group owns the Silverbird TV,  Silverbird Cinemas, the Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria (MBGN) pageant and Mr Nigeria Contest . Its business divisions are : Silverbird Properties, Silverbird Film Distribution, Silverbird Communications,,Silverbird Production and Dream Magic Studios. 

Ben Murray- Bruce is known as the King of Entertainment in Nigeria for being the number one showbiz impresario straight after his graduation from the University of South Carolina in the United States of American in 1979, he started his popular Silverbird Productions in 1980 and brought top African American R&B, funk and disco acts for sold out live concerts in Lagos, including Kool & the Gang, Delegation, Rafael Cameron. SOLAR (the Sound of Los Angeles Records) artistes, Shalamar, Dynasty, The Whispers, Lakeside and Carrie Lucas. Then launched his Silverbird Group having the Miss Universe Nigeria Pageant, Miss Intercontinental Pageant and the most popular annual Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria (MBGN) that discovered Ibiagbanidokibubo Asenite 'Agbani' Darego, MFR, a Nigerian model who was crowned Miss World in 2001. The first black African to win the Miss World beauty pageant.

He was appointed as Director-General of Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) from 1999 to 2003. 

As a frontline member of the People's Democratic Party (PDP), he was elected to the Senate of the Federal Republic of  Nigeria in March 2015, representing the Bayelsa East Senatorial District, in Bayelsa State.

He is the owner of the Silverbird Galleria in Lagos opened the Silverbird Cinemas with the first multiplex of five screens in Nigeria and more cinemas in Abuja, Uyo, Warri and Port Harcourt. .The Silverbird Communications Limited of the Silverbird Group has the biggest and largest private radio and TV network in West Africa comprising the Rhythm 93.7 FM in Lagos, 93.7 FM Port Harcourt, Rhythm 94.7 FM in Abuja, Rhythm 93.7 FM Jos, Rhythm 95.7 FM Awka, and Rhythm 93.7 FM Benin.

He is a member of the Black Music Association of America with Quincy Jones, Dick Griffey, Stevie Wonder and Executive Director of the Coalition for a Free Africa with the late President Samora Machel of Mozambique.  He is a member of the Board of National Arts Theatre (BNT), Nigerian Film Corporation (NFC), Federal Films Censors Board (FFCB), National Film Distribution Company (NFDC) and Nigerian Anti- Piracy Action Committee(NAPAC).



Segun Julius Agbaje (born Olusegun Agbaje; 1964) is the Group Chief Executive Officer of Guaranty Trust Holding Company Plc (also known as GTCO PLC) a multinational financial services group, that offers retail and investment banking, pension management, asset management and payments services, headquartered in Victoria Island, Lagos, Nigeria. He is also a Director of PepsiCo and member of the Mastercard Advisory Board, Middle East and Africa.

View the NFTs on https://nftmyimage.com/@nigeriadaily















Non-fungible token (NFT) art refers to digital assets stored on a blockchain that represent content or even physical items. Art mediums that NFTs can represent include digital drawings, paintings, music, film, poetry, or books. NFT art allows artists to sell or rent their artwork beyond the physical world. 


The most expensive NFT is
‘The Merge’ remains the most expensive NFT of all time. It was sold at $91.8 million during the month of December 2021.

Why are NFTs so expensive?
NFTs are non-fungible, meaning the owner is the only one who has ownership of the thing. These properties are distinctive and unique because they confirm the validity of a non-fungible asset.

My NFTs minted on Algorand blockchain.
They are available for art auctions, exhibitions and sales in Naira, US$, Euro€, £ pound sterling.

They are also available in other formats of art media on canvas, sculpture,  posters and wallpapers for interior decorations for the office, residence and halls and as gifts for all occasions.

NFTs last longer than photos, videos and films that are not on the blockchain. 

The NFT will be in the decentralized InterPlanetary File System.

Algo for DeFi
As non-fungible tokens (NFTs) become increasingly popular, Algorand paves the way for fast, no forking, and a minimal carbon footprint, ensuring a frictionless and accessible NFT experience for both buyers and sellers.

See my NFTs exclusively on Algorand blockchain 

 ©All rights reserved. No copying, duplication and reproduction in any format of media without the authorization and permission of Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima and the International Digital Post Network Limited. 

Monday, September 18, 2023

Nollywood Streaming on the Algorand Blockchain

Today, Monday, September 18, 2023, I successfully put a video clip from my "Lagos in Motion" documentary film on the blockchain of Algorand sponsored by the Algorand Foundation.

The video shows fast rising Nollywood stars, Nunnsi Ojong (all shades of beauty) and Celina Ideh, international beauty pageant Queen and model. They are part of this historical moment on the Algorand blockchain.

https://nftmyimage.com/v1pKBV4e6LXELucuCxhxHQ

CREATED

Sep 18, 2023, 12:28 PM UTC

The NFT will live forever on the decentralized InterPlanetary File System.

Millions of people on the blockchain will will be anxious and curious to watch it. 

The global blockchain technology market size was estimated at USD 10.02 billion in 2022 and is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 87.7% from 2023 to 2030.

Algorand has more than 10 Million Accounts as Adoption Accelerates

New use cases from across DeFi and traditional finance are leveraging the core principles and value of Algorand's decentralized technology as they look to participate in the future of finance.Algorand Reaches 10 Million Accounts as Adoption Accelerates

New use cases from across DeFi and traditional finance are leveraging the core principles and value of Algorand's decentralized technology as they look to participate in the future of finance.Algorand was founded in 2017 by Silvio Micali, a professor at MIT.

The Algorand test network was launched to the public in April 2019, and the main network was launched in June 2019.

Algorand is intended to solve the "blockchain trilemma": the claim that any blockchain system can have at most two of three desirable properties: decentralization, scalability, and security. A system with all three could run on nodes which each have only moderate consumer-grade resources (i.e., does not need a datacenter or large cluster of virtual machines), has transaction processing which scales with the total network resources (rather than the resources available per-node), and could not be subverted by attackers who individually possess a large fraction of the network's total resources.

When it comes to looking up profitable coins, Algorand (ALGO) is a unique crypto asset that should top every list. The well-known crypto asset is self-sustaining and decentralized.

The blockchain-based network is well known for providing support to a number of applications in a safe, secure, scalable, and efficient manner. The platform is also designed to support computations that need reliable performance guarantees. This creates a form of trust betweenWhen it comes to looking up profitable coins, Algorand (ALGO) is a unique crypto asset that should top every list. 

The well-known crypto asset is self-sustaining and decentralized. The blockchain-based network is well known for providing support to a number of applications in a safe, secure, scalable, and efficient manner. The platform is also designed to support computations that need reliable performance guarantees.

See more on

 www.algorand.com


- By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima,
The CEO,
International Digital Post Network Limited,
Publisher/Editor,
NOLLYWOOD MIRROR® Series

Saturday, September 16, 2023

60 Years of the Federal Republic of Nigeria: 1963 - 2023

NIFT of the first President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Dr. Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe, GCFR, JP and the current President, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR. The NFT was minted yesterday on the Algorand blockchain and will be available for public auction on the 60th anniversary of the Republic of Nigeria in October. 

This is the first ever NFT on the first and current President of Federal Republic of Nigeria minted specially for the 60th anniversary from October 1963-October 2023. You can see the symbolic photograph of the President of the First Republic, Dr. Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe in black and white smiling at the current President of the Fourth Republic, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu in colour. The timeless value of the NFT is defined by the symbolism of the political history of Nigeria and should be the exclusive property of the Nigerian government and should be preserved in the digital art gallery of the National Museum and National Library of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

https://nftmyimage.com/70nRCuPPppf8fej_Y9Is2g?created=true

https://nftmyimage.com/@nigeriadaily

Art collectors and dealers who are interested to be invited to the first auctions of NFTs in Nigeria should contact us for the invitation.




Nnamdi Benjamin AzikiweGCFR PC (16 November 1904 – 11 May 1996).
Popularly called "Zik of Africa", one of the Founding Father's of modern Nigeria was  a highly esteemed statesman and national political leader who served as the ceremonial first President of Nigeria during the First Nigerian Republic which existed from 1963 to 1966.



Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Adekunle Tinubu GCFR (born 29 March 1952) is a leading advocate of modern democracy and the 16th and current President of Nigeria. He was the Governor of Lagos State from 1999 to 2007; and Senator for Lagos West in the Third Republic.


Nigerian First Republic (1963 - 1966)  Nigerian Second Republic (1979 - 1983) Nigerian Third Republic (1993) 
Nigerian Fourth Republic (1999 -)

Presidents and Heads of State of Nigeria since October 1, 1960 - May 29, 2023.

General Muhammadu Buhari (May 2015- May 2023)

Dr  Goodluck Ebele Jonathan (29 May 2010 to 29 May 2015)

Umaru-Musa-Yar-Adua (29 May 2007 to 5 May 2010)

Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo (29 May 1999 to 29 May 2007)

General Abdulsalami Abubakar (8 June 1998 to 29 May 1999)

General Sani Abacha (17 November 1993 to 8 June 1998)

Dr. Ernest Shonekan (26 August 1993 to 17 November 1993)

General-Ibrahim-Babangida (27 August 1985 to 26 August 1993)

General Muhammadu Buhari (31 December 1983 to 27 August 1985)

Alhaji Shehu Shagari (1 October 1979 to 31 December 1983)

General Obasanjo Olusegun (13 February 1976 to 1 October 1979)

General Murtala Mohammed (29 July 1975 to 13 February 1976)

General Yakubu Gowon (1 August 1966 to 29 July 1975)

General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi (16 January 1966 to 29 July 1966)

Dr. Azikiwe Nnamdi (1 October 1963 to 16 January 1966)

- By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima, a leading writer on Nigerian political leadership with over 32 years experience in presidential campaigns in Nigeria. He is a former special aide to the Director of Publicity for the Alhaji Bamanga Tukur's Presidential Campaign in 1990. He is the author of The Victory of Muhammadu Buhari and the Nigerian Dream (with 94% positive 2,634 Sellers rating) and other books distributed by Amazon, Barnes&Noble and other booksellers worldwide.

In October 1963, Nigeria proclaimed itself the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and former Governor-General Nnamdi Azikiwe became the country's first President.

Although Nigeria gained independence from the United Kingdom on 1 October 1960, the nation retained the British monarch, Elizabeth II, as titular head of state until the adoption of a new constitution in 1963 declaring the nation a republic.

THE FIRST REPUBLIC

NIGERIA

Nigeria became independent on October 1, 1960. The period between this date and January 15, 1966, when the first military coup d'état took place, is generally referred to as the First Republic, although the country only became a republic on October 1, 1963. After a plebiscite in February 1961, the Northern Cameroons, which before then was administered separately within Nigeria, voted to join Nigeria.

At independence Nigeria had all the trappings of a democratic state and was indeed regarded as a beacon of hope for democracy. It had a federal constitution that guaranteed a large measure of autonomy to three (later four) regions; it operated a parliamentary democracy modeled along British lines that emphasized majority rule; the constitution included an elaborate bill of rights; and, unlike other African states that adopted one-party systems immediately after independence, the country had a functional, albeit regionally based, multiparty system.

These democratic trappings were not enough to guarantee the survival of the republic because of certain fundamental and structural weaknesses. Perhaps the most significant weakness was the disproportionate power of the north in the federation. The departing colonial authority had hoped that the development of national politics would forestall any sectional domination of power, but it underestimated the effects of a regionalized party system in a country where political power depended on population. The major political parties in the republic had emerged in the late 1940s and early 1950s as regional parties whose main aim was to control power in their regions. The Northern People's Congress (NPC) and the Action Group (AG), which controlled the Northern Region and the Western Region, respectively, clearly emerged in this way. The National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC), which controlled the Eastern Region and the Midwestern Region (created in 1963), began as a nationalist party but was forced by the pressures of regionalism to become primarily an eastern party, albeit with strong pockets of support elsewhere in the federation. These regional parties were based upon, and derived their main support from, the major groups in their regions: NPC (Hausa/Fulani), AG (Yoruba), and NCNC (Igbo). A notable and more ideologically-based political party that never achieved significant power was Aminu Kano's radical Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU), which opposed the NPC in the north from its Kano base.

There were also several political movements formed by minority groups to press their demands for separate states. These minority parties also doubled as opposition parties in the regions and usually aligned themselves with the party in power in another region that supported their demands for a separate state. Ethnic minorities therefore enabled the regional parties to extend their influence beyond their regions.

In the general election of 1959 to determine which parties would rule in the immediate postcolonial period, the major ones won a majority of seats in their regions, but none emerged powerful enough to constitute a national government. A coalition government was formed by the NPC and NCNC, the former having been greatly favored by the departing colonial authority. The coalition provided a measure of north-south consensus that would not have been the case if the NCNC and AG had formed a coalition. Nnamdi Azikiwe (NCNC) became the governor general (and president after the country became a republic in 1963), Abubakar Tafawa Balewa (NPC) was named prime minister, and Obafemi Awolowo (AG) had to settle for leader of the opposition. The regional premiers were Ahmadu Bello (Northern Region, NPC), Samuel Akintola (Western Region, AG), Michael Okpara (Eastern Region, NCNC), and Dennis Osadebey (Midwestern Region, NCNC).

Among the difficulties of the republic were efforts of the NPC, the senior partner in the coalition government, to use the federal government's increasing power in favor of the Northern Region. The balance rested on the premise that the Northern Region had the political advantage deriving from its preponderant size and population, and the two southern regions (initially the Eastern Region and the Western Region) had the economic advantage as sources of most of the exported agricultural products, in addition to their control of the federal bureaucracy. The NPC sought to redress northern economic and bureaucratic disadvantages. Under the First National Development Plan, many of the federal government's projects and military establishments were allocated to the north. There was an "affirmative action" program by the government to recruit and train northerners, resulting in the appointment of less qualified northerners to federal public service positions, many replacing more qualified southerners. Actions such as these served to estrange the NCNC from its coalition partner. The reactions to the fear of northern dominance, and especially the steps taken by the NCNC to counter the political dominance of the north, accelerated the collapse of the young republic.

The southern parties, especially the embittered NCNC, had hoped that the regional power balance could be shifted if the 1962 census favored the south. Population determined the allocation of parliamentary seats on which the power of every region was based. Because population figures were also used in allocating revenue to the regions and in determining the viability of any proposed new region, the 1962 census was approached by all regions as a key contest for control of the federation. This contest led to various illegalities: inflated figures, electoral violence, falsification of results, manipulation of population figures, and the like. Although the chief census officer found evidence of more inflated figures in the southern regions, the northern region retained its numerical superiority. As could be expected, southern leaders rejected the results, leading to a cancellation of the census and to the holding of a fresh census in 1963. This population count was finally accepted after a protracted legal battle by the NCNC and gave the Northern Region a population of 29,758,975 out of the total of 55,620,268. These figures eliminated whatever hope the southerners had of ruling the federation.

Since the 1962-63 exercise, the size and distribution of the population have remained volatile political issues. In fact, the importance and sensitivity of a census count have increased because of the expanded use of population figures for revenue allocations, constituency delineation, allocations under the quota system of admissions into schools and employment, and the siting of industries and social amenities such as schools, hospitals, and post offices. Another census in 1973 failed, even though it was conducted by a military government that was less politicized than its civilian predecessor. What made the 1973 census particularly volatile was the fact that it was part of a transition plan by the military to hand over power to civilians. The provisional figures showed an increase for the states that were carved out of the former Northern Region with a combined 51.4 million people out of a total 79.8 million people. Old fears of domination were resurrected, and the stability of the federation was again seriously threatened. The provisional results were finally canceled in 1975. As of late 1990, no other census had been undertaken, although one was scheduled for 1991 as part of the transition to civilian rule. In the interim, Nigeria has relied on population projections based on 1963 census figures.

Other events also contributed to the collapse of the First Republic. In 1962, after a split in the leadership of the AG that led to a crisis in the Western Region, a state of emergency was declared in the region, and the federal government invoked its emergency powers to administer the region directly. These actions resulted in removing the AG from regional power. Awolowo, its leader, along with other AG leaders, was convicted of treasonable felony. Awolowo's former deputy and premier of the Western Region formed a new party--the Nigerian National Democratic Party (NNDP)--that took over the government. The federal coalition government also supported agitation of minority groups for a separate state to be excised from the Western Region. In 1963 the Midwestern Region was created.


By the time of the 1964 general elections, the first to be conducted solely by Nigerians, the country's politics had become polarized into a competition between two opposing alliances. One was the Nigerian National Alliance made up of the NPC and NNDC; the other was the United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA) composed of the NCNC, the AG, and their allies. Each of the regional parties openly intimidated its opponents in the campaigns. When it became clear that the neutrality of the Federal Electoral Commission could not be guaranteed, calls were made for the army to supervise the elections. The UPGA resolved to boycott the elections. When elections were finally held under conditions that were not free and were unfair to opponents of the regional parties, the NCNC was returned to power in the east and midwest, while the NPC kept control of the north and was also in a position to form a federal government on its own. The Western Region became the "theater of war" between the NNDP (and the NPC) and the AG-UPGA. The rescheduled regional elections late in 1965 were violent. The federal government refused to declare a state of emergency, and the military seized power on January 15, 1966. The First Republic had collapsed.


Scholars have made several attempts to explain the collapse. Some attribute it to the inappropriateness of the political institutions and processes and to their not being adequately entrenched under colonial rule, whereas others hold the elite responsible. Lacking a political culture to sustain democracy, politicians failed to play the political game according to established rules. The failure of the elite appears to have been a symptom rather than the cause of the problem. Because members of the elite lacked a material base for their aspirations, they resorted to control of state offices and resources. At the same time, the uneven rates of development among the various groups and regions invested the struggle for state power with a group character. These factors gave importance to group, ethnic, and regional conflicts that eventually contributed to the collapse of the republic.

The final explanation is closely related to all the foregoing. It holds that the regionalization of politics and, in particular, of party politics made the stability of the republic dependent on each party retaining control of its regional base. As long as this was so, there was a rough balance between the parties, as well as their respective regions. Once the federal government invoked its emergency powers in 1962 and removed the AG from power in the Western Region, the fragile balance on which the federation rested was disturbed. Attempts by the AG and NCNC to create a new equilibrium, or at least to return the status quo ante, only generated stronger opposition and hastened the collapse of the republic.

More about the Government of Nigeria.

Source: U.S. Library of Congress

Highly Recommended 
PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI