May 1, 2026

The Baselitz Tree.

IMG_6982 (3)

I am inviting you to invert images today in honor of the recently deceased Georg Baselitz, who said, as I quoted below, "The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in."

IMG_6974 (1)

23 comments:

Peachy said...

Isn't it funny how at first it makes ya dizzy.

Aggie said...

Your inner ear would like a quiet word.....

Indefinitely Extended Excursion™️ said...

Baselitz may not be the most quotable painter but the images speak volumes for him, the German postwar condition comes through with brio.

J L Oliver said...

Am I weird to really like these?

Ann Althouse said...

I think the inverted image is what appears on the retina and the brain has had to work to "see" the image as "right side up."

Original Mike said...

""The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement"

It's more than that.

Original Mike said...

"I think the inverted image is what appears on the retina and the brain has had to work to "see" the image as "right side up.""

True, but that's because the lens inverts the image, not because the sky is really down.

Peachy said...

It's like inverting the curvature of the earth. It's a freaky scene.

Flat earth water flips are easier because we are already used to the reflection trick.

Original Mike said...

It's not so much an inversion as it is a 180-degree rotation. Left/right also swaps.

Rocco said...

When I was very little, I wondered if that’s the way the world looked in China (on the opposite side of the earth).

Original Mike said...

It is true that the objects in the night sky (constellations, planets, the moon) are "upside down" when viewed from the southern hemisphere. If you know the sky well, it's kind of a disturbing effect.

Original Mike said...

Canis Major with his head in the dirt is just wrong.

Peachy said...

Rocco - ha.
Ann's art found a name. Springtime in China.

Kevin said...

"The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in."

So reinforcing of Northern Hemisphere primacy. People down South are reminded of their inferiority every time they look out their windows and see their trees and plants depicted as "upside down".

Smilin' Jack said...

""The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement"

It’s how we define the word “down”. All language requires that kind of agreement. If you don’t like it, shut up. Cool pics, though.

Smilin' Jack said...

“So reinforcing of Northern Hemisphere primacy. People down South are reminded of their inferiority every time they look out their windows and see their trees and plants depicted as "upside down".

People down south are inferior because walking around upside down all the time damages the brain.

Lazarus said...

Flip the sunrise paintings upside-down and you can imagine the lake as a strangely clouded and turbulent sky and the sky as a very placid lake. It wouldn't work as well for a landscape or cityscape or portrait.

Lazarus said...

If there is something already "abstract" and featureless about a picture, as in Baselitz's tree or the sunrise lake pictures, flipping works well. Less so if there are recognizable figures and features. Or maybe it just works in a different way.

Original Mike said...

People on the MacKenzie plateau in New Zealand say they are going "up" to Christchurch. Christchurch is north of the MacKenzie plateau. We heard it several times when we were there recently and each time it sounded wrong to me. It took awhile for me to understand why. My brain wanted Christchurch to be "down" because it is at a decidedly lower elevation. But it's also north and all their maps follow the convention of having north as up, so "up to Christchurch" makes sense in that regard.

RNB said...

"The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement." A tiresome, clever-sounding sophistry. The speaker is invited to fall into the sky.

Original Mike said...

Gravity defines up and down. Up is the direction objects fall away from. As it happens, the sky coincides with this direction.

chuck said...

If inverted trees are the game, Knuth has you covered. In early editions of TAOCP, he had trees rooted at the bottom. Nobody else did that, and in later editions he rooted them at the top, as nature and reading custom dictated. He confessed that his original choice had been upside down.

Zavier Onasses said...

Changing profile pic for today. Wife does watercolors, I do the framing. She does a lot of wild life, single animal on white background. I really liked this one, use it for another email avatar. Wife told me I had framed it upside down.

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