Foundation est mort. La place de marché NFT sélectionnée qui a contribué à définir le boom de l'art crypto de 2021 a officiellement fermé le 15 avril 2026, après qu’une vente planifiée à Blackdove ait échoué à la dernière minute. Voici ce qui s’est réellement passé, pourquoi cela importe pour le reste du secteur NFT, et ce que les collectionneurs de Foundation possèdent encore réellement.
POINTS CLÉS
- Foundation Labs a fermé le 15 avril 2026 après que Blackdove a abandonné une acquisition prévue annoncée pour la première fois le 27 janvier 2026. Le fondateur et PDG Kayvon Tehranian a confirmé la fermeture sur X, indiquant que l'acheteur a conclu qu'un marché propriétaire correspondait mieux à sa direction.
- Les ventes primaires cumulées ont atteint environ 230 millions de dollars depuis le lancement, mais le revenu annuel s'est effondré, passant d'environ 20,5 millions de dollars en 2021 à environ 90 000 dollars en 2025 et seulement 4 500 dollars au premier trimestre 2026, soit une chute de plus de 99 % par rapport au pic.
- Parce que les NFT Foundation ont été émis sur Ethereum et Base, les collectionneurs conservent la garde via leurs propres portefeuilles même avec la fermeture du frontend. Les NFT listés sont temporairement bloqués dans un contrat intelligent, et il a été conseillé aux utilisateurs de sauvegarder leurs médias NFT via IPFS dans un délai d'environ douze mois.
Foundation n'a jamais été la plus grande place de marché NFT, et c'était le but. L'idée a toujours été différente : des artistes sur invitation uniquement, une orientation curatoriale vers l'art crypto sérieux, et un modèle de redevances appliqué par contrat intelligent qui rémunérait les créateurs à perpétuité. Pendant une brève période en 2021 et 2022, cette approche a fonctionné. En 2025, elle a cessé de fonctionner, et Foundation est devenue l'une des nombreuses plateformes NFT axées sur l'art contraintes de se demander si elles pouvaient survivre à un effondrement structurel du volume des échanges.
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How Foundation Built the Curated NFT Market for Art
Foundation Labs, Inc. was founded by Kayvon Tehranian and Matthew Vernon and launched its public marketplace in February 2021. Tehranian, a Princeton graduate with a software engineering background, took the CEO seat. Vernon led design. The two raised a $200,000 disclosed Seed round on February 17, 2021, with ten investors that included 1kx, Andreessen Horowitz, Designer Fund, and Cultural Leadership Fund.
The core mechanic was simple. New artists could not list freely. They had to be invited by an existing Foundation creator, which kept the supply curve constrained and the average quality high. Primary sales took a marketplace fee that started near 5% and migrated upward as the platform expanded its products. Secondary sales paid creators a 10% royalty enforced at the smart-contract level, in perpetuity, regardless of which marketplace the resale happened on.
Over time Foundation layered new products on top of that base:
- Drops, a no-code tool for creators to mint up to 10,000 NFT editions for the cost of a single mint.
- Editions, for multi-quantity creator releases.
- Worlds, launched as a curator product so that anyone could spin up a themed gallery and earn a fee on every sale within their World.
- Exhibitions, launched on February 26, 2024, which extended the curator model into time-bound shows.
- A 2024 expansion onto Base, the Ethereum L2, to reduce gas costs for both creators and collectors.
By the time of the shutdown, cumulative primary sales on Foundation had reached approximately $230 million.
Why the Blackdove Acquisition That Should Have Saved Foundation Fell Apart
Foundation entered 2026 looking for an exit, not a turnaround. On January 27, 2026, Blackdove, a digital art tokenization and physical display company, announced a plan to acquire Foundation Labs. The framing was straightforward: combine Foundation’s marketplace and creator base with Blackdove’s hardware and distribution layer to build an end-to-end art platform that ran from minting to physical display.
Operational handover happened first. Foundation’s infrastructure and team responsibilities transferred toward Blackdove ahead of formal closing. Due diligence ran in parallel rather than before the handover, and that ordering became the problem. By mid-April, Blackdove had completed its review and concluded that building its own proprietary marketplace better aligned with its long-term direction. The deal collapsed, and management of Foundation Labs reverted to Tehranian.
On the evening of April 15, Tehranian posted the announcement on X: "Earlier this year we entered into an agreement to sell the Foundation platform to a buyer who intended to continue its operations." He added that Foundation had explored further acquisition paths but that current market conditions made another deal impractical. "Our goal in pursuing a sale was always to see Foundation live on. That is no longer possible."
By the time of the post, Foundation’s infrastructure had already been spun down. There was no path to bringing the frontend back online.
What Happened to Foundation’s Revenue and Trading Volume
The financial story is the cleanest explanation for why no buyer wanted to operate Foundation in 2026. Annual revenue followed a clean exponential decay:
- 2021: approximately $20.5 million.
- 2025: approximately $90,000.
- Q1 2026: approximately $4,500.
That is a decline of more than 99.9% from peak across roughly five years. Total cumulative primary sales held up better at about $230 million since launch, but the rate of new sales had slowed to a trickle long before the Blackdove negotiation began.
This compression is not a Foundation-specific problem. Across the wider NFT sector, monthly trading volumes have fallen by more than 90% from the 2021 to 2022 peak. The fixed costs of running a curated marketplace, smart-contract maintenance, frontend hosting, support staff, content moderation, and partner integrations, do not scale down nearly as fast as fee revenue does.

What the Foundation Market Shutdown Means for the Rest of the NFT Sector
Foundation is not the only art-focused NFT platform that has run out of runway. The 2025 to 2026 stretch has seen a wave of closures: Nifty Gateway, MakersPlace, Rodeo, and X2Y2 all wound down or paused operations. Per DefiLlama, OpenSea now controls roughly 73% of all NFT transactions, which compounds the pressure on smaller platforms by absorbing the bulk of the remaining volume.
The pattern points to two structural lessons:
- Curation is a real value proposition, but at current volume levels it does not generate enough fee revenue to sustain a venture-funded organization.
- Frontend marketplaces are becoming commodified. The on-chain ownership layer is durable, the user-facing aggregator layer is not.
The platforms most likely to outlast this cycle are the ones with either dominant volume share or extremely low fixed costs. Boutique curated platforms that sit between those two extremes are squeezed from both sides.
What Foundation NFT Holders Own Now
This is where the decentralization argument moves from theory to practice. Foundation NFTs were minted directly to Ethereum and Base. The token records, ownership history, and royalty logic all live on those chains, not in Foundation’s database. When the frontend went offline, the assets did not.
Collectors retain custody through whatever wallet they used to buy. They can move the NFTs, send them, or list them on other marketplaces that read from the same chain.
Two practical issues remain:
- Listed NFTs that were on auction or sale at the time of shutdown are temporarily locked inside Foundation’s marketplace smart contract. Resolution is pending and will likely require a contract migration or claim mechanism.
- Off-chain media is not automatically preserved. Foundation has urged creators and collectors to back up the underlying images, video, or audio via IPFS within roughly twelve months, after which the company’s own pinning will lapse.
For a deeper look at why NFTs matter beyond the marketplace layer, LBank Academy on NFTs as the invisible backbone of Web3 covers the durability of on-chain ownership in detail.
Where the Curated NFT Market Goes From Here
The curated NFT market does not end with Foundation. It just gets smaller and stranger. Several patterns are forming as platforms try to survive the fee-revenue collapse:
- Onchain-only minting protocols where the marketplace is a thin frontend over open contracts.
- Social-graph-tied curation, where collector reputation drives discoverability instead of editorial gatekeeping.
- Direct creator commerce, where artists sell from their own storefronts rather than paying marketplace fees at all.
Whether any of those patterns scale into a Foundation-sized business is unclear. What is clear is that the next generation of curated NFT markets will need to launch with a structurally lower cost base than the venture-funded marketplaces of 2021. The artists they serve will continue to mint on Ethereum and other settlement layers regardless. For investors tracking the underlying chain rather than any single platform, Ethereum price prediction on LBank covers the broader market context. Foundation’s shutdown closes one chapter of crypto art history. The on-chain layer stays open.
For the official wind-down notice and final updates, Tehranian’s announcement was posted on Foundation’s official X account.


