
Gerhard Richter, “Buche (Beech Tree),” 1987. Credit… Gerhard Richter, via David Zwirner. [New York Times capition and illustration]
The beech tree [German Buche] is a witness, a bystander, a memorial. A collection of them would be a beech forest, or Buchenwald.
Today we are cursed… to live in a time of extreme image hyperplasia. Computationally produced pictures (there is nothing “artificially intelligent” about them) are now inundating every pipe and orifice of our personal and political lives. The image produced by prompting a large language model glitches as it propagates. It has no roots, no referents. And as these A.I. models produce imagery at a crazed clip, they are hollowing out the very basis of depiction — worming through the last little faith we once had in images to reveal us the world as it is.
But Gerhard Richter has already shown us (has made a life of showing us) how to keep our grip amid out-of-control image overproduction. He has modeled for us how to look seriously, and create legitimately, when the image is in perpetual question.

Gerhard Richter, “Eisberg im Nebel (Iceberg in Mist),” 1982. Credit… Gerhard Richter; via David Zwirner. [New York Times caption and illustration]
Where the sea meets the sky, where the eye fails and every word sounds artificial, he insisted that individual doubt could be the wellspring of a new mode of vision. This is a doubt that tests what the truth is, even as history passes into vapor.
(Jason Farago, “For Painting’s Great Skeptic, Gerhard Richter, History Is a Blur,” New York Times, 6-11-26)
(c) 2026 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved









In Times of Tribal
To the pup’s ghost: Sic ‘em, boy! Oil on pizza box.
— If you ain’t white, we ain’t open.
(Dixie whistle.)
“Voter fraud” is not about fraud. It is about who votes and how. It is about the breadth and scope of the political community… about who can call themselves Americans — entitled to govern as equals — and who are mere subjects.
(Jamelle Bouie)
In times of tribal Jesus loves me,
This the Bible tells me so.
In this world in which we live in,
Love is weak and strong is woe.
Yes, Jesus loves me?
Yes, Jesus loves me!
Yes, Jesus loves me?
The Bible tells me so!
“New Republican Maps Split Up Black Voters in Three Southern States” (headline)
“Oh I wish I was in the land of cotton,
Old times there are not forgotten,
Look away, look away, look away…”
“Are you from Dixie? I said from Dixie!
Where those fields of cotton beckon to me.”
“Swanee, how I love ya, how I love ya,
My dear old Swanee!”
The tunes and lyrics, ingrained from toddlerhood by my mother’s sturdy alto, abide in my head like an unflagging hurdy gurdy. The Jesus one, abused by this bad boy, sends up a Sunday school staple. It has just occurred to me: Rather than post the Ten Commandments in Texas schools, as currently ordained, why not replace them with this forlorn and dated Sunday school ditty stranded also in my pysche:
“Jesus loves the little children,
All the children of the world.
Red and yellow, black and white,
They are precious in his sight,
Jesus loves the little children of the world!”
(c) 2026 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved