BitBasel’s sixth edition of its Miami Art Week fair, themed “Fingerprints of Humanity,” took place from December 3–7, 2025, at The Sagamore Hotel South Beach. The event united art, technology, and culture in a weeklong program of headline exhibitions, summits, and late-night celebrations. Highlights included Michelangelo’s Battle of the Centaurs, The Jean-Michel Basquiat Exhibition, Ocean Planet, AstroGLPH, the Studio 54 Collection, and more.
On Wednesday, December 3, BitBasel’s 6th Annual Miami Art Week fair, Fingerprints of Humanity, opened with the Family Office Forum, bringing together legacy families, collectors, and impact investors for high-level conversations on purposeful wealth, art, and the next economy. That evening, two-time Grammy Award-winning artist Shaggy energized the crowd as he hosted OkayPlayer Presents: Friends From New York, performing his chart-topping hits including “Angel” and “It Wasn’t Me,” and unveiling the title of his forthcoming album Lottery, kicking off the week with a dynamic blend of music, digital art, and nightlife.

On Thursday,the momentum continued with BitBasel’s Sea & Space Summit, curated by former NASA astronaut and artist Nicole Stott, which explored the intersections of ocean conservation, space innovation, and environmental storytelling through panels and immersive installations. After sunset, MOOON.Party Vol. 3 transformed The Sagamore South Beach into a late-night art-and-music playground under the last supermoon of 2025, featuring DJ sets that carried the energy well into the night. A major milestone was reached as the City of Miami Beach officially proclaimed December 4th as “BitBasel Day.”

BitBasel’s Sea & Space Summit, curated by former NASA astronaut and artist Nicole Stott, took place at The Sagamore Hotel South Beach on December 4.

On December 4, MOOON.Party Vol. 3 at The Sagamore Hotel South Beach featured live DJ sets that kept the energy pulsing under the last 2025 supermoon. The following day, December 5, the focus shifted to the future of creativity and commerce with the Art & Fintech Forum during BitBasel’s 6th Annual Miami Art Week fair, where founders, technologists, and Web3 leaders explored blockchain innovation and emerging art-economy models. Entrepreneur and Shark Tank star Daymond John delivered an unexpected masterclass about the future of arts and entrepreneurship, and the night then transitioned fully into digital culture with NFT Miami, presented by Superchief NFT Gallery, showcasing leading digital creators and celebrating the visual language of Web3.

On Saturday, December 6, the 24th Iconic Sagamore Brunch at The Sagamore Hotel South Beach, part of BitBasel’s 6th Annual Miami Art Week fair Fingerprints of Humanity, featured the unveiling of The Orb of Harmony by internationally acclaimed artist KEF! (Simon Röhlen), created in partnership with Sobe Sky Development, The Morris Lapidus Foundation, and BitBasel. The Miami Beach staple welcomed over 1,000 guests throughout the morning, who enjoyed bottomless mimosas, à la carte crepes, bites by Veggies Made Great, IV drips, and immersive interactive art across the hotel grounds. That evening, Basel City brought festival-level energy with sets by Goldcap, Facundo Mohrr, Eric Essebag (live), Yonit, and Marimar, accompanied by immersive art activations including an exhibition by Studio 54 house photographer Sonia Markowitz.

Closing out Miami Art Week, BitBasel also presented The Queens Gathering, a daytime celebration honoring women shaping the future of art, design, media, and cultural leadership, highlighted by storytelling sessions and a special presentation from Alexandra Gucci Zarini, followed by The Kings Exhibition, curated by Dr. Glenn Toby, offering a moving tribute to Jean-Michel Basquiat through artworks, curatorial insights, and discussions on identity, cultural legacy, and public art.


This year, BitBasel was sponsored by Alfa Romeo; AC Kitchen and Chef Allen Campbell; Bitcoin Bubba; Disco Cat; Eternal Creations; Future House / Family Office Forum; Loca Loka; and The Onyx Reserve. Alfa Romeo displayed its 33 Stradale—one of the rarest and most coveted Italian supercars ever created—alongside the Tonale Art Car at The Sagamore South Beach, drawing crowds throughout the week.



