Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So

Can Brainrot Be Art? Beeple Thinks So

Author: Artnet News January 16, 2026 Duration: 44:09
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.

Ever wonder what really drives the multi-billion dollar art market or what happens behind the velvet ropes at major museums? The Art Angle, from the editors of Artnet News, pulls back the curtain. Each week, this podcast takes the often opaque headlines dominating the art world and breaks them down into compelling, accessible conversations. You’re essentially getting a front-row seat to the discussions happening inside the newsroom of the industry's leading publication. Episodes dive into the forces shaping contemporary culture, from jaw-dropping auction results and controversial exhibitions to the political and social currents influencing artists and institutions today. It’s not just about what’s selling; it’s about what these stories mean for the broader cultural landscape. By grounding lofty topics in clear analysis and expert insight, The Art Angle makes the art ecosystem understandable, revealing why these narratives matter far beyond gallery walls. Tune in weekly for a thoughtful, no-nonsense perspective on the people, power, and money that define visual culture today.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

The Art Angle
Podcast Episodes
Re-Air: A Reporter Goes Undercover in the Art World [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 48:51
The contemporary art world is nothing if not confusing. It is simultaneously deeply frivolous, and takes itself way too seriously. Its business dealings combine total mystification with conspicuous consumption, and the e…
What Is Orphism, History's Most Enigmatic Art Movement? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 36:38
In the early 1900s, art movements within the then-burgeoning category of modern art were exploding in multiple directions, and among them was a strand called Orphism. What was it? In some ways, it is hard to say. Relativ…
A Famous Novelist's Alternate Art World [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 40:17
As a novelist, Jonathan Lethem is basically a genre all his own. His books mash up literary fiction and pulp into disorienting but engaging combinations, for which he’s won both a MacArthur Grant and the National Book Aw…
What New Is There to Say About Leonardo da Vinci? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 25:08
Legendary documentary filmmaker Ken Burns is famous for his deep dives into topics of American history, ranging from the American Revolution, Benjamin Franklin, the Civil War, and the history of baseball, to name just a…
Re-Air: The One Word That Explains Art Now [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 44:52
Re-Air from August 15,2024 There’s so much culture now that it can be hard just to keep up, let alone to think about it all as a whole… but that only makes the effort to find perspective more important. It’s not always c…
How Textiles Took Over the Art World [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 37:49
Contemporary art comes in many shapes and forms, but close your eyes and think of what an artist looks like and nine times out of 10, I bet you are still thinking of a painter in front of a canvas. If recent interest for…
A Damning Appraisal of Art World Elitism [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 44:56
Few creative works ever managed to get the weird pathologies and unique characters of the art world quite right. But journalist and author Hari Kunzru's newest novel Blue Ruin is definitely one of those works. Set in the…
The Brooklyn Museum Is Turning 200. What’s Next? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 36:00
Over the past 200 years, a museum in New York has quietly grown to become one of the city's most esteemed cultural institutions. You might think I'm talking about the Metropolitan Museum of Art or the MoMA, but no, it's…
Is There Anything Miranda July Can't Do? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 49:08
The filmmaker, artist, and writer Miranda July has worked across such a variety of media over the years, one might say it is almost hard to categorize her work. But there is actually a strong through line that emerges wh…