The Face (1966)
Bensi Box is proud to offer The Face (1966) by Pablo Picasso as our first tokenized and fractionalized artwork. We are excited to bring this work of art to the Avalanche blockchain, giving it new provenance in 2025.
The artwork from Picasso has been fractionalized into 2401 unique NFTs. Each NFT represents exactly 0.2 in (0.508 cm) squares of the artwork. Each square has a unique Token ID and color synopsis details.
Explore the artwork from Picasso in depth at picasso.bensibox.art
Mint Details
Chain: Avalanche C Chain
Launchpad: Salvor
Launch Date: February 6th, 2025
Mint Price: 0.9 AVAX WL, 1.0 AVAX Public
Contract Address: 0x3F4BE5A356e66cae7E4944B12CD5A63b969A9540
Ownership & Governance Rights
The Face (1966) is managed and owned by Bensi Box. Owning a fractionalized NFT of the Pablo Picasso gives the holder partial ownership rights over the artwork. In the event the artwork is resold to a new owner, like a gallery, private collector, or museum, two things would occur:
$BENSI Token holders will ratify the sale with our decentralized governance process using our Snapshot governance system
If approved, 100% of the proceeds from the sale would be distributed amongst NFT token holders equally. This is accomplished with a burn-to-claim process, removing the NFTs from circulation in exchange for the sale proceeds.
A Study of Picasso's "The Face" (1966)
Pablo Picasso's late work, characterized by a vibrant palette and a renewed engagement with figuration, offers a fertile ground for artistic exploration. "The Face" (1966), a striking example of this period, exemplifies the artist's ongoing fascination with the human form, albeit refracted through the lens of his signature cubist approach.
The painting presents a fragmented portrait of a man, his face deconstructed and reassembled in a dynamic interplay of shapes and colors. The artist employs a bold palette, with vibrant hues of yellow, blue, and red dominating the composition. These colors are not simply applied but are used to define planes and contours, further emphasizing the fragmented nature of the subject. The eyes, rendered with dramatic intensity, are particularly striking, their large, dark pupils and white highlights conveying a sense of both alertness and introspection.
Picasso's cubist technique is evident throughout the work. The face is fractured into multiple planes, each viewed from a slightly different angle, creating a sense of depth and dynamism. This fragmentation not only challenges traditional notions of portraiture but also serves to emphasize the multifaceted nature of human identity. The subject's features are not presented as a unified whole but rather as a collection of disparate elements, each contributing to a complex and ever-shifting perception.
"The Face" is a testament to Picasso's enduring power as an innovator. In this late work, he revisits the familiar territory of portraiture, yet infuses it with a renewed sense of energy and experimentation. The painting serves as a reminder of the artist's relentless pursuit of new forms and expressions, even at the twilight of his career.

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