Tuesday, March 15, 2022

HMAAC NFT Collection Live thanks efamily member John Guess

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

Media contact:

Davinia Reed

713.526.1015

info@hmaac.org


What Makes America Great and In Motion NFTs Complete the Houston Museum of African American Culture’s Special NFT Collection

The special collection of five NFTs by the visionary and entrepreneurial Houston Museum of African American Culture (HMAAC) that includes a special edition Rosa Parks collectible and the Cotton Wreath Flag and Mosiah Garvey NFTs is now complete with What Makes America Great and In Motion collectibles, all live via auction on Rarible.

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These special edition collectibles at https://rarible.com/hmaac/sale make up the museum’s exclusive NFT collection of five now available.  All five NFTs in the collection are designed by Paris based artist and designer Rodhir Daile.  


Every purchaser of any of the NFTs in this initial special collection gains exclusive access to both a forthcoming Metaverse event hosted by HMAAC as well as a claimable Meet-&-Greet access to Ekow Nimako’s artist tour of his 100,000 piece LEGO Kumbi Saleh 3020 CE installation being viewed for the first time outside of the Toronto’s Aga Khan Museum. 


With thousands of followers on multiple social platforms HMAAC is one of the most dynamic and consistently community focused national brands that brings history and culture directly to its visitors and consumers. 


By making artwork, collectibles, clothing, and access to events available through the Metaverse, HMAAC’s supporters  can enjoy a more intimate, memorable and lasting relationship with the museum that was not possible a few short years ago.


About the Houston Museum of African American Culture (HMAAC) 

The exhibits, message murals, films, performances, public art projects and community engagement events at the museum and inside neighborhoods of color emphasize the museum’s direct empowerment of neighborhoods. HMAAC has a singular goal: to create cultural capital in our neighborhoods that empowers individuals to feel more confident, to see the value and have more pride in the neighborhoods where they live, and in this way begin to break the generational cycle of poverty.  It is in this context that the museum’s multicultural conversation on race devolves into the Afro-futuristic hope of a common future of equity and equality. Being the only African American museum in the country without dedicated public funds as a public good, HMAAC serves as an example of what vision and commitment can accomplish against significant odds. As a museum in a building and in the community, HMAAC stands as one of the most visionary and entrepreneurial cultural assets in the country.

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