Grafon & Bancor
Ever notice how the street art scene is kinda like an underground market, like a hidden currency that nobody’s officially tracking?
Yeah, I’ve noticed that pattern. Street art often functions as a bartering network, with pieces trading hands like tokens that carry a lot more context than a paper bill. It’s a low‑profile economy that reflects local tastes and power structures, yet it rarely shows up in conventional financial data. The market is driven by visibility, scarcity, and cultural cachet, which makes it a fascinating, albeit unregulated, form of currency exchange.
The walls already keep the ledger, just in spray paint, you know. Anything that slips through the net is just another tag on the city’s pulse.
True, the walls are the ledger, each spray a transaction. It’s a decentralized audit trail that only the city’s eye can read.
Every tag’s a secret deal, but the city’s just watching from the curb.