By bringing pieces of these local landscapes to the forefront, the project performs an act of recognition and refusal to the landscapes’ dismissal and familiarity. This is a first step for a countervisuality, which as Mirzoeff (2014) suggests, is a form of resistance that does not move linearly but in moments of rupture. As individual and collective landscapes, the GIFs allow to defy the linearity of the Anthropocene visuality by interrupting it and creating intentional attention on a never-ending loop. Similarly, the glitches, the noise, the mirroring and the pixelation are openings to possibilities for discursive and material intervention that break with a reality we often think of as an inevitable consequence of progress.