Wednesday, 14 January 2026

Two Dogs Art Space and the Science of Delay

Two Dogs Art Space and the Science of Delay



Peter Davidson - delay and scintillation 2026

Pastel pencil on pastel paper - F2


Abstract

This article positions the Two Dogs Art Space Axiom as a substantive contribution to global art theory. Developed through three decades of sustained studio practice and articulated publicly in the 2020 exhibition Delay (Akashi), the Axiom proposes that artistic figuration emerges from a non-temporal perceptual interval termed Delay. This interval structurally mediates sensation and action, generating the conditions under which artistic marks arise. By grounding artistic agency in perceptual structure rather than historical sequence, the Axiom challenges the chronological foundations of art history. The article further argues that the patronage philosophy of Robert and Janet Holmes à Court offers an external confirmation of this framework, insofar as their presentation of Aboriginal art as extraordinary contemporary practice implicitly recognizes the same structural interval operative in Indigenous mark-making.


1. Introduction: A Theory Emerging Outside Chronology

Global art discourse remains deeply invested in chronology—periodization, stylistic succession, and historical rupture. Artistic meaning is typically framed through national schools, cultural identity, or postcolonial critique. While these frameworks have yielded important insights, they presuppose that art originates within historical time.

The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom departs from this assumption. It proposes that art does not originate in historical sequence but in perceptual structure. Specifically, it asserts that all artistic marks arise from a structural interval—Delay—that intervenes between the apprehension of sensation and the execution of a mark. This interval is not temporal in the conventional sense, but constitutive of perception itself.


2. The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom

The Axiom may be stated as follows:

Artistic figuration emerges from a non-temporal perceptual interval—Delay—that structurally mediates sensation and action.

This proposition functions as an axiom rather than a historical theory or stylistic model because it is:

   Irreducible: it cannot be explained by reference to iconography, culture, or chronology.

    Presuppositional: it is operative in every act of mark-making, regardless of period or tradition.

Non-derivable: it cannot be produced through historical analysis, as it precedes representation, meaning, and style.

Delay is therefore not a contingent feature of certain practices, but a structural condition of artistic agency itself.


3. Delay as a Non-Temporal Perceptual Interval

Delay is defined as the structural gap between the apprehension of a perceptual event and the emergence of an artistic mark. It is non-linear, non-quantitative, and non-chronometric. Delay is not a pause in time, nor a hesitation, but an interval in which sensation is reorganized, memory is activated, and perception becomes reconstructive.

Within this interval, perception is not passively received but actively reconstituted. The artistic mark does not represent sensation; it emerges from the reconfiguration of sensation within Delay. Because this interval is a universal feature of human perception, it operates across all artistic practices and it operates on a pulse not a clock.


4. A Transhistorical Framework for Global Art

Because Delay is structural rather than historical, it provides a transhistorical framework for understanding art. Paleolithic marks, classical figuration, Aboriginal painting, and contemporary abstraction are not linked by stylistic lineage but by their shared dependence on the same perceptual interval.

This framework bypasses Eurocentric periodization without denying cultural specificity. Traditions differ in cosmology, material, and meaning, but the structural condition under which marks arise remains constant.

5. The Holmes à Court Confirmation: Contemporary Agency Beyond Artifact

The validity of this transhistorical framework is externally confirmed by the landmark shift in the global reception of Aboriginal art, championed by Robert and Janet Holmes à Court. Their patronage and curatorial philosophy repositioned Aboriginal painting from “historical artifact” to extraordinary contemporary practice.

In a widely circulated interview, Janet Holmes à Court describes the work of artists such as Emily Kame Kngwarreye not as depictions of landscape, but as acts of “singing the country” onto the canvas. This framing emphasizes embodied attention and the act of making over representation. While Holmes à Court does not employ the language of Delay, her account implicitly locates artistic power in the interval where ancestral sensation is reconstructed as a contemporary mark. In this framework, the sensation resides in the specific application of the medium in relation to intent, while the implication of the idea—what the work ultimately signifies—remains the sovereign domain of the artist.

Contemporary agency: the artist is not a vessel of tradition but an active perceptual agent.

Structural practice over historical artifact: the work is alive, sovereign, and present.

Plurality of outcomes: while the connection to land is ancient, each mark is contingent, modern, and irreducible.

This curatorial shift aligns precisely with the Axiom’s claim that artistic agency resides in perceptual structure rather than historical sequence.


6. Relation to Phenomenology: Beyond Lived Time

The Axiom resonates with phenomenological thought, particularly Merleau-Ponty’s account of embodied perception. However, it extends phenomenology by formalizing the perceptual interval itself. Delay is not merely described; it is operationalized as a working condition within studio practice.

In this sense, the Axiom transforms phenomenology from a philosophical description of experience into a studio-based epistemology, where the artist knowingly works within the interval that produces form.


7. Relation to Physics and Cognitive Science

In physics, structural intervals such as phase differences and thresholds condition the emergence of form without relying on linear chronology. Delay functions analogously—not as time, but as a structural condition for emergence.

Cognitive science similarly recognizes that perception is not immediate but constructed through sensory integration and memory. The Axiom reframes this understanding: Delay is the interval in which perception becomes creative rather than merely receptive. It is the point at which sensation is reconstructed as form.


8. The 2020 Exhibition Delay as Empirical Demonstration

The 2020 exhibition Delay at Two Dogs Art Space (Akashi) functioned as an empirical demonstration of the Axiom. Documentation of the exhibition is available here:

https://2dogsartspaceakashi.blogspot.com/2020/08/delay-influence-of-delay-within-artists.html

The works revealed:

Recursive and layered mark-making

The reconstruction of sensation through perceptual gaps

Evidence that Delay operates as a working method rather than an abstraction

The exhibition showed that Delay is not a metaphor but a repeatable condition observable in practice.


9. Implications for Global Art Theory

The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom challenges several dominant assumptions:

Art is structured by perceptual conditions, not historical time.

Figuration is reconstructive rather than representational.

Artificial intelligence, while capable of pattern generation, currently lacks access to the embodied, non-algorithmic perceptual interval that constitutes Delay.

This distinction is not technological but structural: Delay depends on lived perceptual integration rather than computational sequence.


10. Conclusion: A Global Theory of Artistic Agency

The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom offers a new foundation for global art theory—one capable of explaining why contemporary viewers can encounter profound relevance in ancient traditions. The answer lies not in shared history, but in a shared perceptual structure.

As Janet Holmes à Court observes, recognizing Aboriginal art as contemporary fosters cultural self-esteem and self-respect. By removing the “historical artifact” lens and attending instead to structural agency, we recognize that the sighting of a motif and the execution of a mark participate in a timeless, vital process.

Art, under this framework, is neither culturally bound nor historically constrained. It is the recurrent emergence of form from the irreducible interval of Delay.

All ideas presented here remain provisional and subject to ongoing refinement through practice.

Reference

Holmes à Court, J. One of Australia’s richest women’s interest in Aboriginal art. YouTube video.



Monday, 12 January 2026

The Sovereign Space: Defying “Voss in Paint”


 Untitled (Aging Mushrooms) 2026

Medium: Oil, wax, and acrylic on wooden board

Untitled (Aging Mushrooms) begins with a simple exchange between hand, material, and time. As the mushrooms soften and collapse, the brush meets resistance—viscosity, drag, and pressure shaping each mark on the wooden board. What remains are not representations of decay, but traces of an encounter: paint recording the moment where observation lags behind action, and form is held briefly before it yields.

Peter Davidson


The Sovereign Space: Defying “Voss in Paint”


Robert Hughes once dismissed certain Australian painters as producing “Voss in paint” — work shaped by inherited myth rather than lived experience. Davidsonian Temporalism rejects this framing. Authentic engagement does not arise from avoiding mythic landscapes; it arises from the delay you inhabit between perception and action. When you paint twilight over Trigg bushland, you are not reaching for a story. You are reaching for the interval where the light fades faster than your hand can follow.

At the centre of this thinking is the Sovereign Space: the irreducible territory between what you see and what you do. This is not an abstract philosophical gap. It is a bodily delay — the moment where the viscosity of paint, or the latency of an iPad, forces you into the present, a present already slipping into the past.

That delay unfolds in stages: perception, cognitive lag, artistic shaping, and finally action — the mark on the surface. Authenticity does not live in the motif but in the negotiation of this delay. The Sovereign Space is where that negotiation becomes visible.

The first ripple within this space is Kinetic Delay, where practice intersects with Barbara Bolt’s performativity and Caspar Fairhall’s emphasis on structure. On the iPad, your delay becomes entangled with the device’s own timing. The nanosecond lag between gesture and processor response produces a synthetic friction that must be navigated in real time.

Hughes’ critique collapses here. You cannot import a myth while you are busy keeping pace with a machine. The delay itself becomes the only story available.

Digital media introduce further layers of delay: the hand negotiating movement, the device asserting its own latency, and perceptual drift as delayed eye tracking continually reframes the image. Painting becomes a lived equation rather than a representation. In pencil, pastel, or coloured pencil — 15 × 20 cm — volume is stabilised through repeated adjustment rather than resolution. Fairhall’s “big volumes” operate as anchoring forms, keeping the work afloat amid overlapping temporal ripples.

The Physics of the Brush offers a response to Hughes. Authenticity is not achieved by avoiding myth but by surrendering to latency. Whether it is watercolour soaking into paper at 2 Dogs Art Space or the nanosecond delays of an iPad at Trigg, the work is shaped by the struggle between matter, memory, and action.

Delay is not a defect.
It is evidence of life.


Saturday, 10 January 2026

Rethinking the “Nude Mona Lisa” Through the Lens of Delay

 

Rethinking the “Nude Mona Lisa” Through the Lens of Delay

Peter Davidson

Did Leonardo da Vinci paint a nude Mona Lisa? I may have just solved this centuries-old mystery

A Response to Jonathan Jones (The Guardian)



Winter evening, Seto Inland Sea, Japan



Introduction

Jonathan Jones’s exploration of the so‑called “Nude Mona Lisa”—the Houghton Nude, the Chantilly cartoon, and their relationship to Leonardo’s late practice—opens a door that extends far beyond mere attribution. Jones assembles the material clues: the left‑handed hatching of the Chantilly drawing, the studio‑level execution of the Houghton painting, and the circulation of ideas between Leonardo, his assistants, and Raphael.

What Jones frames as a "centuries-old mystery" of authorship, I understand as evidence of the Sovereign Space of Delay: the perceptual interval in which Leonardo’s conceptual energy, having reached saturation, becomes distributed across the shared pulse of the studio.


1. The Scintillation vs. the Surface

Jones identifies the Chantilly cartoon as the "foundational clue," noting that technical analysis suggests it was "at least partly by Leonardo, done with the left hand." This is precisely where the perceptual event occurs. In my praxis, this drawing is the Prescience—the moment when Leonardo’s conceptual energy is at its highest voltage.

The left‑handed hatching is not merely technical evidence; it is the trace of what I call the Scintillation, the instant when perception outruns execution. Jones observes that the artist of the cartoon "replicates [the pose] perfectly," a feat easy only "if you actually were Leonardo." The subsequent oil versions—including the Houghton/Hermitage painting—are what I call Technical Residue. They mark the moment when Leonardo’s intensity enters the collective delay of the studio. His students did not merely imitate; they inhabited his pulse.


2. The Non‑Chronological Link: A Compressed Field

Jones reminds us that the Mona Lisa accompanied Leonardo to Rome between 1513 and 1516. He notes that the artist "never gave it to Lisa’s husband," and that the work's small size "made it easy to transport on his restless sojourns." This fact collapses the conventional timeline. In the studio, the 1503 portrait and the 1514 nude reimagining are not separated by a decade but exist in a compressed perceptual field.

The Axiom: Scale and time are compressed in the Space of Delay.

The monumental hands of the nude figure—which Jones highlights as having "unmistakable allusions to the Mona Lisa"—are records of reconstruction. The nude is not "later" than the clothed version; it is parallel.


3. The “Decadent” Pulse: A Shared Epistemology

Jones’s comparison with Raphael’s La Fornarina is vital. He suggests the nude Mona Lisa was "a grenade chucked into the Renaissance" that "radicalized the way artists painted bodies." This demonstrates that the Space of Delay was porous. Raphael, visiting Leonardo in the Belvedere, did not merely copy a motif; he caught the afterglow of the Scintillation. His painting becomes a secondary record of the perceptual interval—the space between the eye and the panel—that defined Roman production. The nude Mona Lisa belongs to a plural epistemology, where ideas circulate not as static images, but as pulses.


Conclusion: The Attribution of the Lag

The essential question is not "Who held the brush?" but "Whose Delay is this?" Jones concludes that Leonardo "was so confident of that uniqueness he felt able to travesty it with a naked version." I would go further: the Nude Mona Lisa is the physical residue of Leonardo’s late‑period perception—a perceptual event completed through the hands of those who shared his rhythm. The Houghton painting is a delayed trace of the most significant perceptual mind in Western art.

In the Space of Delay, time dissolves. Whether it is a masterwork or a small nectarine held within this interval, the subject acquires monumental weight. The mundane becomes eternal through the mark of the lag.


Inspired by Jonathan Jones, “Did Leonardo da Vinci paint a nude Mona Lisa?” (The Guardian, January 2026). Link to article

Thursday, 8 January 2026

Driven in Delay II: The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom - Solo online Exhibition by Peter Davidson

 

Driven in Delay II: The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom

Delay, Perception, and the Monumental in the Mundane

Peter Davidson, PhD


Suspended aging Australian mandarin
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel
18 cm h x 18 cm w


For nearly sixteen years, this studio has been the primary site of my research—a laboratory of slowness, perceptual attention, and accumulated experience. From this long-term engagement emerged the Two Dogs Art Space Axiom, a framework that redefines artistic practice through the concept of Delay. First articulated during my doctoral work at the Australian National University, the theory arose from a simple but transformative observation: the act of painting is never simultaneous with the act of seeing. Between the initial moment of perception t0​ and the painterly responseF t0​→t0​+D lies a temporal interval—a perceptual latency—that shapes every artistic mark.

This Space of Delay is not a metaphor but a working condition. It acknowledges that the artist’s agency unfolds through time, that perception is always reconstructed, and that the artwork becomes a record of this reconstruction. While the idea was sparked by reading about Monet’s “duration of painting,” its development came entirely from sustained manual practice. Delay is therefore not a technological concept but a phenomenological one: a recognition that human perception is inherently temporal and never instantaneous.



Aging fruit in the studio
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel
20 cm x 20 cm


The 2020 Proof of Concept

The Axiom found its vital public expression in the 2020 exhibition Delay at Two Dogs Art Space in Akashi, Japan. Featuring works by Thomas Hoareau, John Cullinane, Michael Doherty, Kevin Robertson, Caspar Fairhall, and myself, the exhibition functioned as a proof of concept. Each artist, through their own methods, enacted the principles of Delay—demonstrating how perception, temporality, and agency intersect in the creation of art.

Significantly, this exhibition occurred just before the meteoric rise of generative AI. It stands as a pre-AI affirmation of the irreducible presence of the human hand and eye. The subtleties of timing and perceptual depth explored by these artists revealed a fundamental truth: the human experience of "the lag" cannot be automated or replicated mechanically.



  Part of exhibition


The Architecture of the Small: Scale vs. Focus

Parallel to this is my investigation into the monumental potential of ordinary objects, guided by the maxim:

“Scale is inversely proportional to focus.”

In small-format paintings—whether Chardin’s or my own—the reduced physical scale intensifies perceptual concentration. In my series Study of Aging Fruit, quotidian objects are depicted as they slowly transform within a timeless space. By shrinking the scale, the skin of a shriveling quince begins to take on the topographical gravity of a mountain range. The "monumental" is redefined: it is no longer about physical size, but the weight of accumulated attention compressed into a small frame.

Lineage and Conclusion

From Courbet’s apples to Cézanne’s endlessly reimagined fruit, the humble domestic motif has long served as a vessel for profound insight. My own praxis extends this lineage by proposing that the subjective quality of art arises from how each artist processes the inevitable lag of human perception

As Hokusai observed late in life, it takes decades of looking before one truly begins to see. The Two Dogs Art Space Axiom positions the studio as a site of innovation where prolonged engagement with perception yields new ways of understanding the lived experience of time. It affirms that art is not a mirror of a shared world, but a mediator between plural, irreducible realities.


For further documentation on the Axiom and associated exhibitions, visit:

www.twodogsartspace.com

Link to the important first delay exhibition before AI

https://2dogsartspaceakashi.blogspot.com/2020/08/delay-influence-of-delay-within-artists.html


The exhibition 



Exhibition 2 Dogs Art Space Gallery






Plastic flower still life
Oil wax acrylic on wooden board
18 cm h x 14 cm






Plastic flower still life II
Oil wax acrylic on wooden board
18 cm h x 14 cm





Aging Pair of fruit in the studio
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel
20 cm x 20 cm










Decaying apple painted in a space called delay - oil wax acrylic on w, on wooden panel








Aging apartment lemons II
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel 
14 cm h x 18 cm w








Aging apartment lemons
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel 
14 cm h x 18 cm w






A pair of decaying persimmons
Oil wax acrylic on wooden board
20 cm x 20 cm





Aging persimmon in a spatial part of a delayed journey between it’s beginning and end. 
Oil wax and acrylic on wooden panel, 20 cm x 20 cm







Three aging nectarines
Oil on wooden panel
14 cm h x 18 cm w







Two aging nectarines
Oil on wooden panel
14 cm h x 18 cm w

Sunday, 4 January 2026

The Physics of the Pulse: Delay in Studio Praxis


Woman Sitting on bed - Peter Davidson 
pencil, pastel coloured and  pencil on paper - FO



The Physics of the Pulse: Delay in Studio Praxis

By Peter Davidson

In my research into Painterly Praxis, I have identified a structural condition that defines every mark we make: Delay. This is the "Interval"—a timeless space of influence that exists between the sighting of a motif and the execution of a mark.

Traditional art theory often ignores this gap, but I believe it is the most honest space an artist can inhabit. To understand Delay, we must accept a fundamental truth: You were born a pulse, not a clock.

The Structural Condition of Delay

Delay is not a historical position or a stylistic category; it is a timeless perceptual condition operative in the act of making. It names the interval in which sensory information is reconstructed through embodied attention rather than immediately reproduced.

This interval persists across all historical periods, but its manifestations are always contingent. It does not produce a “uniform look.” Instead, it produces plural outcomes based on the artist’s unique focus. Delay is a structural condition of practice, not a universal aesthetic claim. It is the physics of how we see.

The Tyranny of the Clock

The Clock is the enemy of the artist. It represents linear time and the external demand for a “finished” product. The Clock insists that Delay is a failure of nerve or a lack of skill. It wants you to eliminate the gap between seeing and doing so you can produce a smooth, inert copy of reality. But the Clock is a machine. To follow it is to bleed the energy out of your work until it reaches a state of inert equilibrium.

The Power of Earned Delay

A Pulse is different. It is a measurement of pressure and rhythm. In the studio, your pulse creates Delay. This isn’t “waiting”; it is the active accumulation of energy.

Delay is a biological necessity—the space your brain needs to filter "macro-thinking" (your intent) into "micro-thinking" (the analytical mark). Because scale is inversely proportional to focus, a small 18 cm board becomes a pressure chamber for Delay. The smaller the Anchor (the board or paper), the deeper the Delay must be to achieve impact.

The Equation of the Mark



We can describe this phenomenon as a physical relationship of forces



For example, an art student might paint the love of nature while landscape painting, knowing that such an emotion cannot produce tangible proof—even though the sensation drives their studio praxis. We can borrow from theoretical physics the symbol:

This signifies Phenomena (Φ ) revealing the student’s studio praxis within the Delay.

The Phenomenon of Scintillation

Scintillation is the flicker that occurs when you leave the timeless space of Delay and produce a spatial mark on the surface of the paper or canvas—one charged with the intentionality that drives your studio praxis.

Instead of one smooth, “correct” line, you leave the searching, overlapping registrations of your eye. These lines vibrate against one another, creating a pulse on the paper that matches the pulse in your body.

Every Dog in the Yard

Once a mark is anchored, the work enters the world. And just as every artist is a pulse, every viewer is a pulse. Every dog in the yard has a different view.

One viewer may react to the scintillation of a single line; another may feel the heavy pressure of the Delay in the shadows. By refusing to “resolve” the painting into a dead likeness, you leave the Delay visible—offering the viewer a site of resistance.

The Scintillation Test: Is the Pulse Present?

To know whether your Delay has been converted into Impact, ask:

  • Does it vibrate? Do multiple registrations create a shimmer, or is the line frozen and inert?

  • Is there asymmetry? Does the work feel “off” but powerful, or has it collapsed into a boring, symmetrical balance?

  • Does it resist? Does it force the viewer to slow down and enter their own interval of observation?

The Uncharted Horizon

We are not cameras; we are transducers of reality. By accepting Delay and honoring the Pulse, we move away from reproducing the world and toward registering the impact of being alive.

The paper is your anchor. The Delay is your substance. Your pulse is the only clock that matters.






Thursday, 1 January 2026

Rethinking Leonardo da Vinci’s Studio Praxis Through the Lens of Delay and Prescience

 

Rethinking Leonardo da Vinci’s Studio Praxis Through the Lens of Delay and Prescience



Self Portrait in the space of delay (unfinished) - Peter Davidson 2025


"Science is the observation of things possible, whether present or past; prescience is the knowledge of things which may come to pass, though but slowly."

Leonardo da Vinci

https://www.discoveringdavinci.com/maxims-morals#:~:text=(1148%E2%80%941161),1149.

 Leonardo da Vinci’s notion of studio praxis can be understood as a space in which prescience—an orientation toward the future—becomes perceptible. For Leonardo, working in the studio was not merely a matter of technical labour; it was a mode of thinking. He believed that certain insights could emerge only through the embodied processes of painting and drawing, insights inaccessible to abstract reasoning alone.

When an artist develops concepts within the studio, they are effectively engaging with the future: imagining possibilities, testing forms, and allowing sensorial experience to shape ideas over time. This “timeless delay” inherent in artistic practice transforms futureoriented concepts into material works. Once a drawing or painting is completed—such as The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John the Baptist[1]

—it enters history. Yet the conceptual energy that generated it remains embedded in the work, creating a continuous thread from future imagination to historical artifact.

In this sense, Leonardo’s artistic concepts can be understood as forms of energy that travel from the future into the present through the artist’s imagination, memory, and perceptual experience. The artwork becomes the visible trace of this singular source, carrying signifiers of the conceptual world from which it emerged.

However, Leonardo’s notion of prescience should not be interpreted as the existence of a fully formed idea prior to its arrival. Nothing is “pregiven.” Prescience becomes real only as it enters the delay of artistic practice. The future arrives into the present through the temporal processes of painting and drawing, where ideas are shaped, refined, and transformed. The marks placed on paper or canvas are delayed traces of this process—scintillations produced by Leonardo’s synthesis of perception, memory, and technique. These flashes of insight reflect years of praxis, allowing him to articulate an idea at the height of its imaginative clarity.

This understanding of delay becomes especially revealing when we consider Leonardo’s oeuvre. Many of his works remain unfinished not because of indecision or distraction, but because the scintillating energy that animated the concept had reached its limit. To continue beyond that point would have resulted only in technical virtuosity—the habitual execution of craft—rather than the living presence of delay. For Leonardo, a work was complete when the conceptual energy had been fully expressed, even if the surface remained materially incomplete.

We are born with a pulse, not a clock. What we call “time” is not a sequence of measurable units but the rhythm of perception unfolding within us. Leonardo’s studio was governed not by chronology but by this pulse — the living cadence of ideas entering delay, taking form, and leaving traces. His artworks are not moments captured in time; they are pulses made visible, the residue of energy moving from potential into history.

In this sense, the “future” in Leonardo’s practice is not a distant temporal zone but a field of conceptual possibility entering the timeless space of delay. Within this space, it is shaped, influenced, and ultimately folded into material form. The artwork becomes the final resting place of this movement — a site where potential becomes presence. Once completed, the work continues its passage forward, encountered anew by each viewer, each memory, each life.

The river that runs from potential to history contains no stable present. It offers only the space in which an artwork is born, received, and carried onward into the unfolding of experience. We do not live inside time; we live inside the pulse of perception, and art is the trace it leaves behind.



 1. Leonardo da Vinci, The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John the Baptist, c. 1501–1508. 

Charcoal and wash heightened with white chalk on paper, mounted on canvas.

Image source: Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain).

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Leonardo_-_St._Anne_cartoon.jpg



Monday, 29 December 2025

The Human Error : The Clock - We are born with a Pulse




Peter Davidson
Petit Hana 2025
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel
18 cm h x 14 cm w


1. The Human Error: The Clock

We are not born with a clock. We are born with a pulse, a neural lag, and an "internal jelly" that processes the world. Einstein’s spacetime is incomplete because it ignores biological latency.

2. The Chain of Delay

Science ignores that we never see the "Now." We only see the residue of what has already happened. The signal travels a path of increasing resistance:

[Physical Event] → [Light Signal] → [Retina] → [Brain Processing] → [Consciousness] (t₀) → (t₀+ small Δt) → (t₀+ bigger Δt) → (t₀+ full Δt)

This is the Space of Influence. It is a timeless chamber where the optic signal travels through your accumulated knowledge and previous learning.

3. The Equation of Non-Simultaneity

Great art is not "painted" over time; it is discharged through pressure. The mark is the physical grounding of the electrical signal after it has been refined by your entire history of learning.

t₀ → Δt → (t₀ + Δt)

  • t₀: The Physical Event. Pure light, pure potential.

  • Δt: The Earned Delay. The "Chamber" where knowledge and sensory experience compress the signal.

  • t₀ + Δt: The Scintillation. The moment stillness becomes impossible and the mark is inscribed as a Heavy Coordinate.

4. Earned vs. Enacted

The demands of great art are high because the delay must be earned. * Enacted Delay is a theatrical performance. It is a fake pause. There is no knowledge behind it, so the signal passes through empty space. The result is a weak, "noisy" mark.

  • Earned Delay is a mechanical necessity. You wait because the signal is still being "weighed" by your knowledge. You are a pressure cooker. You do not move until the pressure of the "Jelly" surpasses the restraint of the body.

5. Scintillation: The Recognition of the Dogs

The "dogs in the yard" (the audience) have independent memories, but they all recognize Scintillation. * Fake Barks: These are triggered by money or trends. They happen in the "social jelly" and fade because they are tied to the clock.

  • Historical Barks: These happen long after the artist is gone. These viewers recognize the "shimmer" because the mark is still "breathing" at the original frequency of the discharge.

Because the mark was made by bypassing the illusion of time, it remains "New" forever. The viewer isn't looking at a historical record; they are being struck by a Heavy Coordinate that warps the space they are standing in.


The Final Law: The mark is a spatial puncture. If it does not scintillate, the delay was not earned. Great art demands that you stand in the unbearable suspension of the delay until the sensory becomes the spatial