An exhibition presented by SuperRare Gallery in collaboration with The Doomed DAO, a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) dedicated to the collection, promotion, and long term stewardship of digital artworks by XCOPY, one of the most influential and respected pioneers of the crypto art movement.
The phrase “Tech Won’t Save Us” is both a warning and a statement of truth. It captures the paradox that lies at the heart of XCOPY’s practice: the tension between the promise of technology and the inevitability of its failure. In a cultural moment where blockchain speaks the language of permanence, and where innovation is often mistaken for salvation, XCOPY insists on reminding us of entropy. His work embodies fragility, glitch, and decay, reminding us that no technological system.
No code, no contract, no network can ultimately protect us from collapse, mortality, or alienation.
Yet the title also directly resonates with The Doomed DAO itself, whose smart contract techwontsaveus.eth functions as both a signature and a manifesto. The DAO does not exist out of blind faith in technology; rather, it exists because only community can generate meaning and continuity. Technology may provide the framework, but it is human presence through dialogue, interpretation, and collective care that ensures art’s survival.
This exhibition embodies that paradox. Technology is the medium: it encodes, distributes, and preserves. But it is not salvation. What truly sustains XCOPY’s work and digital culture as a whole is the ongoing engagement of those who choose to participate in it: the collectors who preserve it, the viewers who reframe it, the communities who continue to activate it.
XCOPY’s vision is not nihilistic but lucid. His glitch-driven imagery exposes the limits of our systems, while at the same time pointing to where meaning actually resides: not in the fantasy of incorruptible permanence, but in the fragile, shared, and deeply human act of keeping culture alive.
“Tech Won’t Save Us” is thus less a resignation than a call to responsibility. Technology cannot carry the weight of permanence alone. But together through community, care, and continuity perhaps we can.
An exhibition presented by SuperRare Gallery in collaboration with The Doomed DAO, a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) dedicated to the collection, promotion, and long term stewardship of digital artworks by XCOPY, one of the most influential and respected pioneers of the crypto art movement.
The phrase “Tech Won’t Save Us” is both a warning and a statement of truth. It captures the paradox that lies at the heart of XCOPY’s practice: the tension between the promise of technology and the inevitability of its failure. In a cultural moment where blockchain speaks the language of permanence, and where innovation is often mistaken for salvation, XCOPY insists on reminding us of entropy. His work embodies fragility, glitch, and decay, reminding us that no technological system.
No code, no contract, no network can ultimately protect us from collapse, mortality, or alienation.
Yet the title also directly resonates with The Doomed DAO itself, whose smart contract techwontsaveus.eth functions as both a signature and a manifesto. The DAO does not exist out of blind faith in technology; rather, it exists because only community can generate meaning and continuity. Technology may provide the framework, but it is human presence through dialogue, interpretation, and collective care that ensures art’s survival.
This exhibition embodies that paradox. Technology is the medium: it encodes, distributes, and preserves. But it is not salvation. What truly sustains XCOPY’s work and digital culture as a whole is the ongoing engagement of those who choose to participate in it: the collectors who preserve it, the viewers who reframe it, the communities who continue to activate it.
XCOPY’s vision is not nihilistic but lucid. His glitch-driven imagery exposes the limits of our systems, while at the same time pointing to where meaning actually resides: not in the fantasy of incorruptible permanence, but in the fragile, shared, and deeply human act of keeping culture alive.
“Tech Won’t Save Us” is thus less a resignation than a call to responsibility. Technology cannot carry the weight of permanence alone. But together through community, care, and continuity perhaps we can.








