Kuno Goda

He owes his foray into the international art scene to the digital currencies Bitcoin[2][3] and Ethereum.

[4] His work "200 Bitcoins" was inspired by Andy Warhol's "200 One Dollar Bills"[5][6] and is regarded to be the first contemporary artwork for digital currency.

[7] The work is dedicated to anonymous bitcoin protocol creator Satoshi Nakamoto.

[9] His Ethereum-related work "Glideth" features all four permutations of the renowned hacker emblem the "Glider", hand-printed on a copper-clad plate.

On World Press Freedom Day 2016 he published a book called "Tell All - How To Bypass Media Censorship".