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Pussy Riot’s Nadja Tolokno: “I want to be Putin’s worst bother”

It is its main goal: to become the worst possible hassle, our sweetened translation of Putin’s original “pain in the ass”. It was to say this during an interview Nadja Tolokno (whose full name is Nadezhda Andreevna Tolokonnikova), one of the members of the Russian punk rock group Pussy Riotalready arrested in 2012 after a performance organized in a Moscow cathedral that had cost her the accusation of hooliganism.

“The problems we are facing today are global – such as war and global inequalities or climate catastrophe – and cannot be solved with current models of government, which are based on the concept of nation. I am trying to build networks and communities of like-minded people to make sure that as a human being I become a powerful enough tool to counter Putin. The goal is to become Putin’s biggest annoyance, “explained the musician and activist a Variety.

The activism of Nadja Tolokno, in particular, has recently been taking shape in the world ofdigital art, with particular attention to cryptocurrencies and the NFT world (in this article we have explained to you what it consists of). Recently, for example, he contributed to the creation of a digital Ukrainian flag, the Ukraine DAO (acronym for Decentralized Autonomous Organization), which managed to raise more than seven million dollars just two days after the Russian invasion of the country; a sizeable sum that was donated to the Ukrainian people and which represents a portion of the 100 million cryptocurrency donations that were made to the Ukrainian government until March 9, according to the US magazine.

In short, for Nadja Tolokno the world of cryptocurrencies and NFT is one of those available to carry on their social struggles and counter corrupt power, also thanks to fundraising such as the one that took place for Ukraine.

Among his initiatives there is also Unicorn DAO, which aims to amplify messages and support female artists and artists from the LGBTQ + community, with a focus on gender GAP which unfortunately also affects the world of art. “I entered the NFT world because I wanted to find better tools for activism: I’m always looking for something at the intersection of art and technology. I believe that if you want to make a revolution, you have to embrace what the world is offering you in technological terms ».

Technological innovations such as the metaverse, in whose alternative reality Nadja Tolokno dreams of a world where patriarchy does not exist. Through her digital projects she also wanted to emphasize the predominantly male composition of the NFT world, in which female artists are just 5% (in any case more than 2% of the traditional art market).

Thus continues his opposition to all forms of power, with the conflict in Ukraine as a momentary priority. There is no long-term plan, for one simple reason: «it is difficult to make predictions at the moment. Putin no longer follows any rules ».

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Source: Vanity Fair

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