Even in an era where the visual world is increasingly filtered through screens, German artist, sculptor, and professor Peter Zimmermann continues to insist on the tactile intelligence of painting—its depth, its resistance to immediacy, and its ability to now transform digital imagery into something experiential. His recent exhibition, Painting Rules, at the Metropolitan Museum of Manila presents a reflection on how such images are circulated and internalized in such an algorithmic age. Zimmermann’s paintings often begin with images drawn from digital culture, whether it's media fragments, graphics, or scanned materials, manipulated on the computer before translating them into layered resin compositions. Yet the final works are unmistakably painterly objects, shaped by gravity, viscosity, and the unpredictable behavior of materials. As the artist explains, “Usually, I do a printout, and the printout is the starting point…I try to come close to this, but of course, the paintings always develop in different..