We teamed up with GIPHY Arts to commission a new GIF series!
What do GIFs as a practice look like today?
With support from GIPHY Arts, Rhizome commissioned ten artists to make GIFs, or GIF-adjacent works. We invited artists that don’t maintain exclusive GIF-based practices, but whose work is engaged with digital art and technology, as well as analogue media such as illustration, painting, writing, and kinetic sculpture.
While some artists chose to respond to the nostalgia that early internet GIFs often evoke, other artists situate their GIFs within complex worlds of the present, the GIF becoming a tool that helps unfold a larger narrative. Others experimented with the medium to make sense of physical projects, the GIF serving as a digital interpretation of a physical artwork or phenomenon. These ten works represent only a sliver of the countless ways that artists are continuing to experiment with GIFs as sites for creative expression today.
In addition to being accessioned to the Rhizome ArtBase — our archive of over 2,200 works of born-digital art — all GIFs are available to share on GIPHY.
See the GIFs and read a bit from the artists that made them, below.
Please be advised that a work in this project contains nudity.
Balfua, Gozentilade Fuckiffilai above the Mountain
“Balfua creates artwork from within his fantastical spirit world, the Sayssiworld. The Sayssiworld is populated by personified sculptures called slollas. In this 3D video-painting, an ancient, mischievous, and monstrous slolla known as Gozentilade Fuckiffilai hovers above a lone mountain waiting to surprise unsuspecting travelers.“