The Toledo Museum of Art is mounting what it describes as its most comprehensive presentation of digital and generative art to date, opening to the public on 12 July and running through 30 November. The show centers on “Masquerade,” the acclaimed non-fungible-token series by artist Sam Spratt, marking the first time the project has been staged in a museum setting. Spratt’s work will be displayed alongside pieces by a broad roster of digital creators and pioneers, including Sol LeWitt, Vera Molnár, Tyler Hobbs, Dmitri Cherniak, William Mapan, 0xDEAFBEEF, Beeple, Sofia Crespo, Quayola, Snowfro and Emily Xie. The exhibition pairs early algorithmic experiments with contemporary blockchain-based works to chart the evolution of computer-generated art. Collectors who own Spratt’s “Mask of Luci” NFTs have been invited to link their digital wallets so their names can be shown next to their tokens on view, underscoring the growing intersection between private crypto ownership and public museum display.