
What Biennials Reveal About the Art World
Apr 30, 2026 - 31:15
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
In art right now, it's hard to avoid talking about Beeple. That, of course, is the alias of Charleston-based Mike Winkelmann, known to millions of followers for digital images that he makes and posts daily. These works g...
Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So is an episode from The Art Angle by Artnet News. In art right now, it's hard to avoid talking about Beeple. That, of course, is the alias of Charleston-based Mike Winkelmann, known to millions of follow...
This episode belongs to The Art Angle.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 15, 2026, 44:09 long, audio available.
In art right now, it's hard to avoid talking about Beeple. That, of course, is the alias of Charleston-based Mike Winkelmann, known to millions of followers for digital images that he makes and posts daily. These works give off the sense of a brain overdosing on memes—we're talking pictures of giant emojis and pop culture junk being worshiped in dystopian techno hellscapes, or melted versions of celebrities and politicians turned into grotesque monsters and killer robots. Beeple first burst into the center of the art world conversation in early 2021 when his work Everydays, The First 5,000 Days hit the block at Christie's Auction House. Sold as an NFT, it was essentially a high-resolution digital image that compiled everything he had made in his first decade-plus of daily posting. It sold for a shocking $69 million, still one of the biggest prices ever for a work by a living artist, and it made Beeple a symbol of both the new respect and opportunity for digital artists and of critics' worst fears about a blockchain-fueled art bubble and the meltdown of taste. While that digital art bubble did crash, Beeple survived and experimented with new media. One of his interactive video sculptures has only just closed at LACMA in Los Angeles, while a set of robot dogs with human heads that he created was the talk of the recent Art Basel Miami Beach art fair in December. His work inspires a lot of commentary, positive and negative, including from national critic, Ben Davis. But there is no doubt that his influence seems to be growing as both museums and galleries try to figure out how to court a new generation of digital natives.
You can listen to Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So is an episode from The Art Angle by Artnet News.
This episode is 44:09 long.
This episode was published on Jan 15, 2026.
Yes. Use the heart button on the episode page to add it to your favorite episodes list.
Yes. This page shows related episodes from The Art Angle when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.
You can listen to Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So is from The Art Angle by Artnet News.
Published Jan 15, 2026 and 44:09 long