TLDR:
- NFT trading volumes collapsed from $2.9 billion in 2021 to just $23.8 million by early 2025 quarterly data.
- Major platforms including Nifty Gateway, Foundation, and MakersPlace announced closures within days in January 2026.
- Centralized storage systems left 27% of top NFT collections vulnerable to permanent loss after server shutdowns.
- OpenSea recaptured 67% of Ethereum NFT volume by expanding into fungible tokens as competitors exited the market.
The digital art marketplace landscape has undergone a dramatic transformation as prominent NFT platforms cease operations.
Trading volumes collapsed from $2.9 billion in 2021 to $23.8 million by early 2025, representing a 93 percent decline.
Gemini’s Nifty Gateway, Foundation, and multiple other platforms announced closures or ownership transfers within days of each other in January 2026, marking the effective end of the venture-backed NFT marketplace ecosystem.
Wave of Platform Closures Reshapes Digital Art Infrastructure
Nifty Gateway announced its shutdown on January 24, 2026, with approximately 650,000 NFTs requiring withdrawal before the April 23 deadline.
Community outcry initially extended the original February 23 closure date. Three days later, Foundation’s creator transferred ownership to BlackDove, a digital art streaming company. The platform had generated $230 million in primary sales during its operational period.
MakersPlace shut down in January 2025 after facilitating the landmark $69.3 million Beeple sale through Christie’s in 2021.
Content manager Brady Evan Walker announced that “ongoing market challenges and funding difficulties have made it impossible to sustain operations while fulfilling our mission.”
KnownOrigin, acquired by eBay in 2022, wound down operations in July 2024. Async Art closed in October 2023 despite raising $2 million in seed funding.
Active traders declined from 529,101 in 2022 to 19,575 by 2025, according to DappRadar. Average art NFT prices fell from $2,044 in 2021 to $475 in 2023.
CEO Conlan Rios reflected that when Async Art launched, “the NFT world was smaller and simpler” with “a genuine sense of altruism all around.”
Christie’s eliminated its digital art department in September 2025 after none of its 11 auctions exceeded $400,000 in sales.
Technical Infrastructure Exposes Centralization Vulnerabilities
A 2024 Pinata analysis revealed that 27 percent of top NFT collections stored metadata on centralized servers. The report noted that some NFTs “simply no longer exist” as their “smart contracts point to metadata that is no longer accessible from the original centralized servers.”
Sam Spratt commented on Twitter that Nifty Gateway’s closure represented “a pure loss” and expressed “gratitude for what was given” before the platform’s ending.
XCOPY’s early work demonstrates the fragility of NFT storage systems. The London-based artist described how Ascribe “fell into the cryptoart platform graveyard” after the service closed.
“Death Wannabe,” released on July 17, 2018, had ten editions but only three remain accessible. Seven editions are locked in the original RareArt Labs contract while “Disaster Suit” survives in four editions but lost its metadata entirely.
Nifty Gateway responded to criticism by announcing metadata migration to Arweave for newer NFTs. Artist Bryan Brinkman acknowledged that “many of us knew the risks of minting on there” but noted the platform “still clung to too many centralized choices” despite contract improvements.
Collector G4SP4RD warned that collections from artists like Beeple and Spratt could become “broken with no possibility of recovery” if servers shut down.
OpenSea recaptured 67 percent of Ethereum NFT volume by late 2025 after expanding into fungible tokens. CEO Devin Finzer tweeted that the platform crossed $2.6 billion in trading volume with “over 90 percent from token trading.”
SuperRare announced on Twitter it was “not going anywhere” and continued operating. Art Basel Miami Beach launched Zero 10 in December, selling 65 percent of digital art works by mid-afternoon on opening day.



