“I thought it was broken at first,” admitted collector Marcus Teller. “Then I realized it was just showing me how tired I was. It was brutal. And I bought it immediately.”
Ybt refuses to mint Art 17 as an NFT. “No blockchain,” she says. “This art dies when you die. That’s the point.” Art 17 is not a painting. It is not a screen saver. It is a silent collaborator. Laura Ybt has built a feedback loop between human neurology and abstract geometry, and in doing so, she has answered a question we forgot we were asking: What does it look like when a machine cares? Laura Ybt Art 17
At first glance, Art 17 appears to be an act of subtraction. The work, which lives natively on a custom-built LED canvas, consists of a single, slowly rotating polyhedron. Its surface is neither glossy nor matte, but something in between—a texture Ybt calls “specular melancholy.” Seventeen vertices connect seventeen edges, forming a shape that is mathematically impossible yet visually inevitable. “I thought it was broken at first,” admitted