We Built the Ledger, But Lost the Legend

by Kenneth Burris


This isn’t theory—it’s lived experience. This isn’t a lament. It’s a letter from the middle of change—not to mourn what’s ending, but to carry forward what still matters.


Dear reader,

This letter is for those who entered the blockchain space with something more than profit in mind—for those who saw art, myth, and intention trying to survive inside the system. It’s also for anyone outside tech wondering if art can still hold meaning in a time of spectacle. And maybe, it’s for me too—to remember why I started at all.

When I mention spectacle, I don’t just mean flashy visuals or media noise. I’m talking about a cultural shift where appearance replaces substance—where value is measured by performance, not presence. In this environment, art is often reduced to content, and tools like blockchain and AI become amplifiers of acceleration rather than frameworks for meaning.

This letter isn’t coming from a theory. It’s coming from my studio. From lived work. From watching what technology can do—and what it can’t.


Reclaiming Meaning

Blockchain gives us permanence. AI gives us reach. But neither gives us purpose. Meaning isn’t a product of scale—it’s a result of orientation.

That’s what this work is about. Not trends. Not metrics. But presence. Human values inside technological systems.

We’re not falling apart. We’re in the middle of a reordering. A turning.

And in every turning, there’s a pause. A breath. A moment where we decide what to carry forward.

I don’t want to carry spectacle. I want to carry signal. I want to make work that offers a framework, not a feed. That holds a shape—not a brand.


A Story Within the Shift

When I began showing work in the Bitcoin art world, I believed we were building something symbolic. I painted coins as symbols. Flames as value. Still-lifes as systems. I wasn’t painting hype—I was painting memory.

But what surfaced wasn’t mythology—it was marketing.

Bitcoin art became a mirror of the market itself. Charts, laser eyes, coins, bulls. Visuals designed to reflect price—not perception. Art as confirmation, not reflection.

I don’t say this to dismiss those who participated. Many of them, like me, were trying to build something honest. But the system wasn’t set up to reward depth. It rewarded repeatability.

And now with AI, the next spectacle is already underway. More capital. More speed. More images.

But also, quietly—a shift.

Artists returning to texture. To silence. To craft. I see people asking: not “What will sell?” but “What still means something?”

That’s what post-globalism signals to me—not anti-connection, but a re-centering of depth over reach. Of meaning over metric.


HODL as a Cultural Ethic

In crypto culture, “HODL” started as a typo. A joke in the face of volatility. But I’ve come to see it as something else: a kind of clarity under pressure.

To HODL now means to hold your ground when the current insists you perform. To stay present in a system designed to distract. To maintain what you’ve learned—even when it’s not rewarded.

As an artist, it means holding my pace. My language. My practice. It means not adjusting my vision to meet the mood of the feed.

HODLing isn’t about inertia. It’s about discernment. It’s about remembering what mattered before the metrics took over.


Art as a Compass (and a Kind of Technology)

I don’t believe art is decoration. I believe it’s direction.

When the world speeds up, art invites stillness. When the feed overwhelms, art can hold. When meaning slips, art can name.

Technology can preserve. It can amplify. But it can’t decide what matters.

That’s why I’ve come to see art not as mere expression or performance, but as a symbolic framework—a kind of cultural compass. Not spiritual in a mystical sense, but essential: because technology can’t orient itself. It needs humans to give it direction. And art, at its best, helps us remember where we’re going.

We’ve built plenty of tools. But we’ve lost the cultural rituals that help us metabolize change.

Nietzsche warned what happens when meaning is stripped from belief and replaced with nothing. McLuhan showed us the cost of tools shaping perception. Baudrillard tracked the rise of simulation. Byung-Chul Han reminds us that slowness and silence are no longer passive—they’re structural acts of resistance.

You don’t have to quote them to feel it. We live it. Every time we choose substance over speed. Every time we refuse to turn our work into product.


Sovereign Exodus (8 of Cups)

Let me leave you with a painting.

A barefoot figure walks toward an unknown world. Behind her: vessels of blue flame—memories, beliefs, old truths still burning. The staff bears Bitcoin’s symbol. Fiat bills drift like ghosts. The ground pulses with a digital hum. And carved in the path ahead: HODL.

It’s not a retreat. It’s a step forward. Quiet. Intentional. Mythic.

That’s where I’m walking.
Maybe you are too.

This painting will be on view at BTC Conference in Vegas May 2025.


Looking Ahead

This letter isn’t a conclusion. It’s a waypoint.

In the next issue, I’ll explore:

– What it means to reclaim myth in the age of AI
– How sacred space might survive in a networked world
– Whether NFTs were just artifacts of collapse—or seeds of something deeper

If you’ve read this far, you’re part of it.
And I’m truly grateful.

— Kenneth Burris
Post-Globalist Studio

Substack: LINK

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