logo
Football as art: Messi picks favourite goal for unique digital work

Football as art: Messi picks favourite goal for unique digital work

Euronews26-06-2025
If your ask a footballer to pick their favourite goal you're quite likely to be told it's like choosing one child over another. Each one is special.
Fortunately, Lionel Messi has made his career from making the right choices on and off the pitch and now the legendary World Cup winning Argentine is hoping to emulate that success in the art world.
He's teamed up with renowned Turkish-American digital artist Refik Anadol to immortalise a goal and give viewers a unique experience shaped by Messi's physical and emotional state.
The strike in question is his unforgettable headed goal in Barcelona's 2-0 victory over Manchester United in the 2009 Champions League final in Rome.
Considering the global football icon has found the back of the net more than 860 times in his lengthy career playing for Argentina, Barcelona, Paris St Germain and now Inter Miami, its significance can't be underestimated among a myriad of magical moments.
Jumping for joy in ultra-high definition
As well as being a cherished collector's item, Messi's choice will no doubt end also up being a popular pub quiz question.
The artwork titled Goal for Life is described by its curators as a "one-of-a-kind masterpiece (that) pushes the boundaries of what art can be – not just a representation of the past, but an emotional, multisensory transmission of it."
At the heart of the work is what Anadol calls the 'architecture of action.' Using an open-source motion-tracking framework, he mapped 17 points of Messi's body to reconstruct his physical form and kinetic expression.
This was layered with biometric voice data, breathing rhythms, heartbeat patterns, and emotional nuances derived from interviews – culminating in a powerful soundscape shaped by Messi's physical and emotional state in that exact moment, setting the emotional tempo of the piece.
The result is a dynamic, eight-minute 'memory temple,' as Anadol describes it – rendered in 16K resolution and presented as a fully immersive experience. Viewers are invited to surrender to the work, forging a visceral connection with Messi and revisiting their own memory of the goal.
'For me, this work is about transforming the data from Messi's favorite goal into living memory – something that we have never done before,' said Anadol. 'We've taken millions of data points – visuals, sounds, physiological signals – from one of football's most iconic moments and turned them into a pioneering art experience. This isn't about nostalgia. It's about reliving the depth of that split second: what Messi felt, what the crowd felt, and what it meant to the world. This AI Data Sculpture work redefines how we experience memory through art.'
'It's an honor to join forces with the Inter Miami Foundation for a good cause – I feel privileged to be able to do so,' said Messi. 'This project means a lot to me, not only because it recalls a special moment in my career, but also because, thanks to such a unique artist like Refik, it can help improve the lives of others who truly need it.'
'This unique artwork explores the intersection of sport, artificial intelligence, and collective memory – turning data into feeling and memory into architecture,' said Ximena Caminos, curator of the project. 'Anadol transforms Messi's iconic goal into a true time capsule – amplifying a historic moment in football and inviting viewers to not only witness memory, but to step inside it. For nearly a decade, he has been on the forefront of creating a new artistic language where memory becomes material, empathy becomes spatial, and art becomes a portal into shared consciousness. It is exciting to witness the expansion of this language into the world of sports.'
The highest bidder will receive the work in its digital form along with a certificate of authenticity co-signed by Messi and Anadol.
Proceeds from the sale will benefit multiple nonprofits, including Inter Miami CF Foundation's global partnership with UNICEF, which supports access to quality education programs in five countries across Latin America and the Caribbean.
Living Memory: Messi - A Goal in Life can now be experienced digitally on the Christie's website and will be physically unveiled at Christie's New York from July 12 through July 22, coinciding with the online auction.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former FC Porto captain Jorge Costa dies aged 53 after heart attack
Former FC Porto captain Jorge Costa dies aged 53 after heart attack

Euronews

time2 hours ago

  • Euronews

Former FC Porto captain Jorge Costa dies aged 53 after heart attack

Former FC Porto footballer and Champions League winner Jorge Costa died at the age of 53 on Tuesday after suffering a cardiac arrest, according to the club. FC Porto "expresses its deepest sadness and consternation at the passing of an inescapable figure in the club's history," a club statement said on Tuesday afternoon. Costa was working as FC Porto's director of football when he died. "Jorge Costa's legacy will forever live on in the memory of all Porto fans. You will never be forgotten, Captain," the statement added. Costa had felt unwell on Tuesday morning and been taken to São João Hospital in Porto, where he "went into cardiopulmonary arrest in the emergency room and died", a hospital source told the Renascença radio station. FC Porto's director of football was working at the club's Olival training centre when he started to experience symptoms. He was initially assisted by FC Porto's medical team using a defibrillator at the scene, the newspaper A Bola reported. At around 12:30 pm local time (1:30 pm CET), the club called the emergency services, who transported Costa to hospital in a very serious condition, according to reports. In 2022, Costa suffered a heart attack and underwent catheterisation to widen an artery. FC Porto's former captain spent 15 years in Porto, playing 383 games and scoring 25 goals. His most memorable achievement was captaining Jose Mourinho's Champions League winning side in 2004, when they beat Monaco 3-0 in the final. Aside from the Champions League, Costa won eight league titles, the Uefa Cup, the Intercontinental Cup, five Taca de Portugal trophies, and eight Super Cups. He also made 50 appearances for the Portuguese national team — featuring at one World Cup and one European Championship — and scored two goals. Costa also spent a season on loan in the Premier League with Charlton Athletic, and finished his playing career at Standard Liège in Belgium. After retiring as a player in 2006, Costa went into management. As a coach, he worked not only in Portugal but in countries such as Romania, Cyprus, France, India and Tunisia, where he managed clubs including Cluj, AEL Limassol, Anorthosis, Tours and CS Sfaxien. Tributes from the wider footballing community have been paid to Costa since his death was announced. FC Porto's rivals Sporting Lisbon said it "extends its deepest condolences, paying tribute to his memory and his contribution as a figure of FC Porto and Portuguese football". Charlton Athletic said in a statement that it was "deeply saddened" about Costa's death. "Affectionately known amongst the fanbase as 'The Tank', Costa joined the club on loan from FC Porto during the 2001/02 Premier League campaign and, despite only featuring 26 times across all competitions, is widely regarded as one of the finest centre-backs to represent the Addicks," its statement said.

Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad sparks controversy online and pleases Donald Trump
Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad sparks controversy online and pleases Donald Trump

LeMonde

time17 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad sparks controversy online and pleases Donald Trump

In the languor of summer, investors were the first to sense the opportunity, sending American Eagle Outfitters' stock soaring by about 20% in a matter of days. The reason: a new ad campaign featuring American actress Sydney Sweeney. It was a throwback to the 1980s, with a blonde star leaning into her car engine while the viewer's gaze follows her neckline, before wiping her hands on the back pockets of her jeans and speeding off in her Ford Mustang: 1.9 million views on Instagram. At another moment, the camera lingers on Sweeney's blue jeans before moving up to her blue eyes: "My jeans are blue," says the actress after praising the passing down of genes from one's parents. "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans," concludes a voice-over, creating ambiguity between "jeans" and "genes." At a third moment, viewed by 4.5 million online users, the actress puts up a poster of herself where the word "genes" is crossed out and replaced with "jeans." Whether seen as highly glamorous or hopelessly outdated, investors don't care, since the controversy has been spreading online: "Supremacist dog whistles," accused influencer Chris Glover, known as GenericArtDad, on TikTok. "The new American Eagle Ad with Sydney Sweeney? That's Eugenics. Nazi propaganda. And it's blatant. Like, you don't even need media literacy. It's that on the nose obvious," echoed author Elle M. Drew on Threads.

After Ferrand-Prévot's triumph in the Tour de France Femmes, France 'is now enamored by women's cycling'
After Ferrand-Prévot's triumph in the Tour de France Femmes, France 'is now enamored by women's cycling'

LeMonde

timea day ago

  • LeMonde

After Ferrand-Prévot's triumph in the Tour de France Femmes, France 'is now enamored by women's cycling'

For 36 years, France had longed to see one of its riders finish the Tour de France wearing the yellow jersey. That wait ended on Sunday, August 3, in Châtel, Haute-Savoie, located in the Alps. "Pauline Ferrand-Prévot has found her Holy Grail," wrote Le Soir. The leader of the Visma-Lease a Bike team, winner of the 2025 edition and the "new Sun Queen," has "captivated" the country in recent days, wrote the Belgian daily. Like many international outlets, the paper celebrated the women's version of the Tour, packed with drama and standout moments. This was especially true after the men's race, where the suspense was short-lived. "The fourth edition of the modern Tour was predicted to be one for the history books (...) And it certainly delivered," observed American outlet The Athletic. Like other foreign publications, The Guardian highlighted the public enthusiasm surrounding the race, validating the vision of its director, former cyclist Marion Rousse. Rousse remarked that she was delighted "not to have seen a Tour de France Femmes, but a Tour de France" along the roadside. Record viewership figures (25.7 million viewers on France Télévisions) confirmed the enthusiasm.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store