# From GIF MARKET to PXL POD: Kim Asendorf’s Evolving Pixel Systems > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/the-pixel-as-market-kim-asendorfs-long-arc-from-gif-market-to-pxl-pod) > Author: Anonymous > Date: 2026-03-10 > Last updated: 2026-03-11 *From XX DAO* In 2011, long before Ethereum, NFTs, or the language of "on-chain ecosystems," Kim Asendorf built a market for pixels. It was called **GIF MARKET**. The project lived on a simple webpage: 1,024 GIFs. Each showed a black line rotating in space, surrounded by a specific number of pixel "particles." Fewer particles meant a lower price; more particles pushed the price higher. #1 sold for €2,624. #1024 cost a fraction of that. Price was calculated as total sales value divided by the number of particles. The equation constituted the work itself. Not as commentary, but as structure. The collectors were peers. Lorna Mills bought #62. Nicolas Sassoon bought #30. The Creators Project bought #80. gli.tc/h bought #32. This was the net art community participating in a system Kim designed--a small, self-contained market embedded inside a browser window. The whole thing ran on pixels, scarcity, and a pricing mechanism tied directly to the smallest visual unit. Fourteen years later, that logic has grown into a fully articulated on-chain system. To understand PXL DEX and the newly released PXL POD, you have to start here--at the level of system design, not market outcome. ## The Open-Source Gesture Around the same time, Kim released his now-famous **pixel-sorting algorithm**, which went on to become a foundational tool of the glitch art movement. Artists from Sarah Zucker to countless Tumblr-era experimenters used it to reorder pixels by brightness or hue, producing streaked, distorted images that resembled digital failure. The effect suggested breakdown. What Kim was really doing was analytical: exposing the structure of the image itself, forcing the mechanics of digital representation into view. Kim released the method openly. It spread through repositories, forums, and informal networks, moving through code instead of through objects. That choice established a pattern that runs through his practice: design the system, then let others inhabit it. Pixel sorting quietly reshaped how a generation of artists understood the image, teaching them to see the pixel as a discrete, negotiable unit--something you could manipulate and reorder. As screens grew sharper and pixels disappeared into abstraction, Kim kept pulling them back into focus. That instinct carries through everything that followed. ## From Net Art to On-Chain Form When NFTs emerged, Kim continued. **Rainbow Grid** (2021) marked an early exploration of color systems on-chain. Collected by XX DAO, the work emphasized structure over nostalgia, leaning into the geometry of screens. **Monogrid**, minted on Hic Et Nunc, extended that inquiry. Infinite, self-evolving grids ran autonomously, indifferent to the viewer's timeline. In **Sabotage** (2022), alignment and disruption became the focus. Rows of pixels moved in strict formation, interrupted by a central "saboteur." Collected by both Flamingo DAO and XX DAO, the piece functioned as a behavioral model. **Cargo** followed in 2023 on Art Blocks Curated. One thousand pieces, each composed of pixels in constant motion. Kim described his interest in "aesthetic spaces vacated through the progression of digital screens." Pixels had become invisible infrastructure; Cargo made them restless again. Flamingo and XX both acquired works from the series. By this point, a pattern had emerged. Across every release, Kim had been iterating on a single thesis: the pixel as both material and method. **Alternate** (2023) pushed further. Color fields collided and dissolved. The code operated as the work itself. Collected by Flamingo and XX, the pieces sat alongside Sabotage and Cargo in DAO treasuries--as markers in an unfolding system. XX DAO also collected **Event Horizon**, released through Bright Moments Tokyo, and **Lights** from the Raster und Spektrum series. Flamingo collected across the arc as well. These acquisitions reflected conviction in a sustained inquiry. What was unfolding wasn't a brand or a market position, but a system exposed in public. ## Commissioning the System In 2024, XX DAO moved from collector to commissioner. **X0X**, created in collaboration with Tribute Labs, consisted of one thousand fully on-chain, real-time animations, named after the Roland X0X drum machines that shaped electronic music in the 1980s. Kim wrote the smart contract himself. That detail matters. The contract functioned as part of the conceptual architecture itself. Six color-generating algorithms and four noise algorithms formed a compact system deployed directly to Ethereum. X0X became the visual identity of XX DAO's site, embodying how we think about digital art: code as medium. The line from GIF MARKET to X0X is subtle but continuous. In 2011, Kim built a browser-based pixel market for a small net art community. In 2024, he deployed a fully on-chain system commissioned by a DAO. The audience expanded. The infrastructure matured. The underlying thesis remained intact. Then came the real escalation. ## PXL DEX: The Pixel Becomes a Token In 2025, Kim released **PXL DEX**. Two hundred fifty-four NFTs on Ethereum, deployed via Verse. Each appears as a non-looping 3D animation, but the animation only tells part of the story. Each PXL DEX piece also functions as a wallet. Inside are PXL tokens--fungible ERC-20 units that represent pixels. Owners can deposit or withdraw them, and each change immediately alters the animation. Dense light emerges as tokens accumulate; sparse constellations appear as they're removed. Market logic is embedded in the work's behavior. Form responds directly to ownership. The work is structurally reactive. Internal balances shape what you see, binding state, image, and ownership into a single mechanism. Flamingo DAO and XX DAO both collected PXL DEX, recognizing it as the natural extension of an experiment that began in 2011. Then, particle counts established internal relationships. Now, token counts determine form. Kim often describes the pixel as the smallest unit he can work with--sometimes a person, sometimes an atom, sometimes a measure. In PXL DEX, it becomes a unit of value. The GIF MARKET formula had found its blockchain-native expression. ## PXL POD: The Ecosystem Expands On March 6, 2026, Kim released **PXL POD**. Two hundred fifty-six fully on-chain, real-time animations followed, marking the second entry in what is now clearly a PXL ecosystem. The mechanics echo PXL DEX: pixels exist as tokens, and collectors shape the work through accumulation and release. The system persists. PXL POD signals continuity. The first release established the mechanics; the second confirms the system is meant to persist. Flamingo DAO and XX DAO both collected PXL POD, extending a relationship that began years earlier with Sabotage, Cargo, and Alternate. These collectors are participating in an expanding on-chain system built around the pixel. ## A Broader Moment Kim isn't working in isolation. Artists like Jonas Lund--currently showing at Art Basel Hong Kong--have spent years treating systems, incentives, and authorship as material. Rosa Menkman continues to theorize glitch as a form of critical exposure. Lorna Mills, Nicolas Sassoon, Sara Ludy, Rick Silva, and XCOPY have all been working with digital systems for decades. Some of them bought into GIF MARKET in 2011. What's changed is institutional attention. Digital art awards, museum acquisitions of generative work, and DAOs building long-term treasuries around sustained practices. Kim's trajectory fits this shift. His work predated NFTs and became legible through them. The pixel sorting algorithm, GIF MARKET, and the open-source ethos all predated today's infrastructure. The blockchain offered a new surface. The thesis was already in place. ## From Sub-Local to Networked In 2011, a small group of net artists bought numbered GIFs on a webpage. The market was intimate. The transaction was as conceptual as it was economic. Between 2021 and 2024, DAOs like Flamingo and XX collected across Kim's output--entire arcs of work. The relationship between artist and collector became sustained, visible, and on-chain. By 2025 and 2026, that relationship hardened into infrastructure. PXL DEX and PXL POD encoded long-standing logic directly into smart contracts. Ownership began to act on the work itself. Pixels could be accumulated, released, redistributed, and form responded instantly. The system had moved inside the artwork. Continuity matters here. The shift from early net art experiments to on-chain economies was legible, consistent, and traceable over time. What began as a browser-based experiment evolved into a distributed system where participation is persistent, transparent, and composable. The scale changed; the idea persisted. ## Closing For more than a decade, Kim Asendorf has returned to a narrow question: what is a pixel? A point of light, a visual artifact, a building block--countable, ownable, exchangeable, reconfigurable. GIF MARKET posed that question directly. Pixel sorting distributed it through open code. Monogrid, Sabotage, Cargo, Alternate, and Event Horizon tested it under different constraints. X0X showed that DAOs could commission systems. PXL DEX and PXL POD embedded it further within the mycellium networks of the ethereum. From Net Art to Art Basel Hong Kong, the pixels continue to make magic in mysterious ways.