Saturday, 28 March 2026

The Engine Room of the Gaze: Beyond Hockney’s Horizon



The Japanese spring flowers by the side of the road
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel
21cm h x 18 cm w


The Engine Room of the Gaze: Beyond Hockney’s Horizon

“This paper proposes a conceptual model rather than an empirically verified neuroscientific theory.”

The Engine Room of the Gaze: Beyond Hockney’s Horizon

“This paper proposes a conceptual model rather than an empirically verified neuroscientific theory.”

The Refusal of the Instant (t0)

Traditional art theory—and even aspects of David Hockney’s account—rests on the assumption of an instantaneous relation between the world and the mark. This imagined instant, t0, suggests that seeing and making coincide.

This instant does not exist. There is no direct contact between the eye and the hand. What intervenes is not emptiness but process: a field of activity in which signals are received, disturbed, and reorganized before they become action. What appears as immediacy is a constructed effect.

Against the Clock

The language of delay implies a measurable timeline, as if the brain were governed by a clock. It is not. There is no central clock in the brain. There is no uniform time against which perception unfolds. Instead, the brain operates through distributed activity—bursts, pulses, and interruptions—none of which are equal, and none of which are synchronized in advance.

What we call “time” is not something the brain follows; it is something produced as these uneven events are brought into relation. There is sequence without measure.

Interruption and Construction

Perception is not continuous. It is composed. Signals arrive as discrete disturbances within a field. These interruptions do not form a stable image on their own. The brain does not passively receive the world; it actively resolves these disturbances into a coherent appearance.

What is experienced as a seamless present is the result of this resolution: an ordering of interruptions into stability. The “instant” is therefore not a point in time, but an achievement—an effect of successful construction.

The Structural Condition (D)

What we call a “delay” (D) is not a gap measured in seconds, but a condition of misalignment within this field of activity. Different processes do not coincide. They interfere, overlap, and fail to resolve perfectly. This condition is not an error—it is fundamental.

D names the instability that must be overcome for perception to appear continuous.

Scintillation and the Residue of Making

In ordinary perception, this instability is concealed. The world appears stable because the brain resolves it. But in sustained acts of looking—especially in painting—this resolution can falter.

In works like The Japanese Spring Flowers by the Side of the Road (21 cm × 18 cm), the small scale forces a high-pressure focus. When the artist works at this limit of discrimination, the construction of the image becomes visible. The result is Scintillation: a vibration or shimmer that belongs neither to the object nor the medium, but to the process of resolution itself. This is the residue of construction becoming perceptible.

Forensic Rhopography

Through the focused depiction of minor or “trivial” details, the artist forces perception beyond its habitual shortcuts. This practice—Forensic Rhopography—does not represent the world more accurately; it exposes the instability underlying its appearance. The image is no longer a window. It becomes a record of negotiation between interruption and coherence.

Conclusion: The Engine Room

The camera, as David Hockney observed, is problematic because it fixes a single, artificial instant. But human perception is no less constructed. There is no transparent access to reality; there is only the continuous production of it.

Painting does not capture the world—it enters the process by which the world is made visible. The true site of painting is not the image, but the Engine Room in which interruptions are forced into coherence.

There is no instant. There is no clock. There is only the ongoing resolution of a world that does not arrive whole.

I wrote this paper because of what David Hockeny (he is a painter I have admired greatly) stated in this article: https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/david-hockney-abstract-art-serpentine-galleries-1234778992

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/sep/26/david-hockney-what-turns-a-picture-into-a-masterpiece#:~:text=It%20takes%20a%20certain%20amount,it%20because%20the%20eye%20moves.&text=When%20a%20human%20being%20is,%2C%20you're%20hardly%20there.

Friday, 27 March 2026

Artistic Perception: Traversing Space and Drift

 


Artistic Perception: Traversing Space and Drift
Its a bit like thinking of stretching and stretching 


Artistic perception is not about waiting for time to pass — it is about moving, stretching, and negotiating space. In the physical world, this movement is the distance the artist traverses between self and object, a spatial offset D that becomes the site of engagement. In digital media, the same logic applies at a micro-scale: the gesture of the hand and the sensor’s recording are separated by a micro-drift δ, a tiny space that the artist must negotiate.

When light enters the eye, it transforms into energy — a viscous jelly, the residue of optics on the nervous system. This residue is recalibrated in the timeless space of delay, where stretching becomes the engine of temporal tension. Across body, mind, and medium, this stretched delay is translated into marks: pencil lines, oil traces, brush strokes.

In every case, art emerges in the space between intention and experience. Whether navigating the macro gap of the physical world, the micro drift of digital interaction, or the subtle residue of neural perception, the act of crossing the gap — of stretching — generates the artwork itself. Delay is not denied; it is embodied, spatialized, and productive, the felt consequence of perception in motion.


Simple version

"Artistic perception isn’t just about time passing—it’s about moving through the gap. Whether it’s the physical distance in a studio, the tiny 'micro-drift' in a digital sensor, or the 'jelly-like' residue in our own nervous system, the act of stretching across that space is what creates the art. The artwork isn't just a record of what we saw; it's the result of the tension created while crossing that delay."

Thursday, 26 March 2026

The Architecture of Seeing: Focus, Scale, and the Power of Delay

 


Peter Davidson - Egg (reworked)
pencil felt tip pen on paper
15 cm x 10 cm


Open-Source Research: Perception, Reconstruction, and the Space of Delay

The Myth of the Snapshot

In the world of the spectator, making an image is often mistaken for a "snapshot"—a quick moment where the eye and hand synchronize to capture a present reality. But the reality of the studio tells a different story. An image is not a product of the "now"; it is a reconstruction built within a "timeless delay." By examining the gap between when our eyes fire and when our hands move, we see that painting is not about the object itself. It is about the residue of the gaze—the structural trace that remains after we stop looking.

The Inverse Law: Small Scale, Huge Focus

A core principle of this "inside-out" approach is the maxim: "Scale is inversely proportional to focus." This is not merely a preference for size; it is a strategy for the density of attention. In the tradition of Chardin’s intimate still-lifes, and in my own 18 cm x 18 cm panels, the small frame acts as its own "mini-universe."

By working small, the artist eliminates the mechanical "noise" of large-arm movement, allowing the perceptual flicker—the vibrating energy of the subject—to stay at its peak. The small scale does not diminish the subject; it intensifies the focus. It forces the viewer to lean in and engage with a high-frequency map of visual data, where every mark is an essential coordinate.

Memory as Reconstruction, Not Storage

Memory is often mistaken for a form of storage—a place where events are held intact, waiting to be replayed. But memory does not function as a recording device. It does not retrieve the past as it was; it reconstructs it.

Each act of recall is not a return, but a rebuilding. What we call memory is an ongoing process in which fragments of an event—its visual, spatial, and sensory residues—are reassembled in the present. These residues do not persist as complete images. They remain as partial structures: traces, anchors, and distortions that survive the initial act of seeing. Imagination operates within this field, guided and constrained by these residual structures. The remembered image emerges through a negotiation between what remains and what must be filled in.

The Laboratory of Studio Praxis

The delay between an event and its recall is not an empty void. It is an active space where perception is filtered, reduced, and reorganized. In the studio, we reject the "clock" in favor of the "pulse." We are born with a rhythm, not a timetable.

By returning to a motif, such as an egg, after months of studio praxis, the artist is no longer painting a surface. They are painting the residue of optics through accumulated revisions. Each return subtly alters the structure of the memory itself. The resulting marks—the colorful crosshairs and structural scaffolding—are the "Worker’s Language" of the brain. They are the diagnostic maps showing the "HUD" (Heads-Up Display) of the maker’s mind as it anchors and rebuilds the image within the long silence of the delay.

Conclusion: The Sovereign Space

To create an "inside-out" image, one must accept the delay. If human imagination in delay is the only way we can truly build an image, then a painting is the physical evidence of that reconstruction.

"Whether condensed into an 18 cm panel or expanded into a scaffold of marks on paper, the goal remains the same: to document the vibration of sight as it survives the gauntlet of neurological travel. The result is a Sovereign Space—a living residue, forged in the delay and held taut by the act of recall."

Monday, 23 March 2026

Drawing the Unfamiliar: Recovering a History of Mark-Making in Western Australia


Peter Davidson - Fremantle 1982 
Pencil on paper

Drawing the Unfamiliar: Recovering a History of Mark-Making in Western Australia

Peter Davidson

Drawing begins as an encounter. It is a way of registering what is seen before it is fully understood—a process of translating space, form, and relation through the movement of the hand. In Western Australia, this act of encounter has a layered and complex history, shaped by vastly different ways of seeing and marking the land.

Since the establishment of European settlement in Albany in the early nineteenth century, artists—including surveyors, explorers, and naturalists—have attempted to comprehend a landscape that appeared vast, unfamiliar, and resistant to inherited visual conventions. Their drawings reflect this effort: tentative, descriptive, and often filtered through European pictorial traditions. These works form a record not only of place, but of the difficulty in perceiving it.

Long before these arrivals, however, Aboriginal peoples had already developed highly sophisticated systems of mark-making grounded in deep cultural knowledge. Across Western Australia, particularly in the north, rock art traditions extend back tens of thousands of years. These engraved and painted forms are not simply images; they are expressions of presence, law, and cosmology. They constitute a continuous and living lineage of visual knowledge that precedes and exceeds Western frameworks of representation.

The Obscured Lineage

This essay focuses on the Western European tradition of drawing in Western Australia, not to privilege it above Indigenous practices, but to acknowledge a history that has become partially obscured. This obscurity is both institutional and personal. On my mother’s side, my family arrived in Australia in the 1860s under a Scottish surname that does not appear in passenger records of the time. It is possible the name was altered or adopted—perhaps by an Irish convict seeking to detach from a former identity.

Convict transportation is often framed retrospectively as a pathway to settlement, yet contemporary accounts suggest far harsher realities. The Second Fleet of 1790, for example, arrived with extremely high mortality rates; those who survived did so in conditions of severe illness and deprivation. In this light, some early arrivals can be understood as people marked by displacement, coercion, and loss.

To acknowledge this complexity does not diminish the profound and ongoing dispossession experienced by Aboriginal peoples. Rather, it situates early colonial society as a site of unequal and intersecting histories, where different forms of dislocation coexisted—though never on equal terms.

The Archive of Perception



[Image: Peter Davidson – Road to Kanowna, eastern goldfields. Water colour, pastel and pencil, 1991]

The motivations of European artists in this context—whether colonial, scientific, or economic—are well-documented, but they are not the primary concern here. What remains significant are the traces they left behind: encounters with land registered through line, surface, and form. These drawings constitute a dispersed archive of perception, one that has yet to be fully recognized within the history of art in Western Australia.

During my early art education, drawing was understood as a foundational practice underpinning all other forms. It held a visible and valued place. Yet today, when one searches for a coherent history of drawing in Western Australia, the record appears fragmented—overshadowed by market-driven or conceptually dominant practices. While these developments have their place, they often leave quieter, more immediate forms of mark-making without sustained attention.

The Primacy of the Mark

"To draw is not to measure time, but to occupy space. It is an act of positioning—of locating oneself in relation to what is seen."




[Image: Peter Davidson – Perth 1980s. Pencil and pastel on coloured paper]

This absence suggests more than a gap in documentation; it points to the diminishing visibility of a particular way of seeing. Drawing is a direct act. It reveals the movement of thought through the hand—the searching relationship between eye and surface. Less mediated than many other forms, it retains a clarity that is both physical and cognitive. When its history recedes, so too does access to that mode of perception.

Across cultures, drawing persists as a constant. It begins with the simple act of marking—charcoal on stone, pigment on bark, graphite on paper—and continues across all levels of artistic practice. It is embedded in perception itself: an attempt to understand space, relation, and form through gesture. It is not governed by fashion or economy, but exists as a spatial articulation—a record of contact between body and surface.

The marks that result hold that position. In this sense, drawing reflects a fundamental human impulse: the need to register presence through form. From a distance, what appears as absence within the history of drawing in Western Australia is more accurately a lack of visibility. Beneath the surface lies a dispersed field of practice shaped by artists working across generations. Their work spans landscape, figuration, abstraction, and conceptual approaches to mark-making, yet remains insufficiently assembled into a cohesive account.

Conclusion - Directions: An Open Recovery

The task of recovery remains open. It requires curatorial and scholarly attention willing to look beyond dominant narratives and to recognize drawing as a discipline with its own integrity. While emerging technologies may assist in bringing overlooked material to light, the impetus must come from an acknowledgment that something essential has been neglected.

“The history of Western drawing in Western Australia is not absent; now in its third century, it remains under-recognized.”; it is waiting and should be celebrated just as Aboriginal art is in the state. It exists as a meaningful continuum that offers future generations a way to engage more deeply with questions of land, space, and perception. Drawing is not secondary or preparatory—it is a primary act, one that continues to shape how we encounter and describe the world.

Sunday, 22 March 2026

The Davidson Hypothesis: A Worker’s Guide to Painting


Peter Davidson - Maganolis poetry inshifting light 
oil wax acrylic in wooden panel, 23.5 cm x 18 cm


The Davidson Hypothesis: A Worker’s Guide to Painting

In this practice, painting is not governed by time but by space. Time, as a sequence of before and after, is an artificial structure that does not operate in the act of making. What matters instead is the existence of space: the interval between the eye, the body, and the material.

This interval can be understood as a form of delay, but not a temporal one. It is not something that unfolds or passes. It is a spatial condition—a gap that persists between things that never fully coincide. The eye does not become the hand, the hand does not become the surface, and the surface does not resolve into intention. Painting happens across this separation.

The mark is formed within this space. It is not the result of a prior moment of seeing, nor the execution of a stored image. It emerges from the contact between elements that remain distinct from one another. Painting, in this sense, is the negotiation of a gap that cannot be closed.

The studio, therefore, is defined not by duration but by spatial conditions. The primary question is not how long a painting takes, but how space is structured—how near or far, how compressed or extended the relation is between eye, body, and material. Whether that space is large or small has no bearing on the completion of the work. Scale does not determine resolution.

A painting is finished not when time has been spent, but when the spatial tensions that produce it have reached a point of stability. What appears on the surface is not a record of time passing, but the visible form of these tensions held in place.

Within this field, the material plays an active role. The resistance of oil and wax does not delay an action in time; it conditions the nature of contact in space. It thickens, drags, and redirects, ensuring that the act of painting remains grounded in physical reality rather than abstraction.

What might appear as vibration or instability in the surface is not an error but evidence. It reveals the persistent non-coincidence between elements—the fact that perception, memory, and material never fully align. This is not a problem to be solved but the condition that makes painting possible.

Painting, then, is not the capture of a moment, nor the representation of an image. It is the manifestation of a spatial relationship: a continuous negotiation across a gap that cannot be closed, only worked.

 


Thursday, 19 March 2026

The Landscape of Looking: Why Thick Paint Matters in a Digital World


Peter Davidson - Magnolia's  Nippon Nocturne 2026

Oil, wax, acrylic on wooden panel 

16 cm x 22. 5 cm 

The Landscape of Looking: Why Thick Paint Matters in a Digital World

In contemporary art, a quiet shift is taking place in how we approach the painted surface. We’re moving away from “outside‑in” painting—where the artist tries to replicate what they see—and toward an “inside‑out” approach that redefines what a surface is. A recent nocturne study of magnolia buds offers a perfect example. It suggests that when we feel a “delay” while looking at a painting, it isn’t because we’re slow; it’s because the paint itself has physical weight that our eyes must navigate.

The Speed Bump of the Brushstroke

At the center of this shift is a rejection of the painting as a mere “image.” In traditional floral painting, the paint is treated like a transparent window: the goal is for the medium to disappear so the viewer sees only the petals. But in this nocturnal magnolia study, the thick impasto becomes a perceptual speed bump.

The ridges and valleys created by a palette knife form a literal landscape. This produces what could be called “tactile resistance.” As light hits the heavy Prussian blue background, the surface seems to vibrate or scintillate. The background isn’t an empty void—it hums with the same energy as the flower. Your eye can’t simply glide across the canvas; it has to climb over the crust of the paint. That climb creates a physical delay between looking and understanding.

Energy Stored in Color

This painting also engages with rhopography—the study of small, overlooked subjects. The magnolia buds hold a compressed, almost explosive energy. Against the dark nighttime background, they occupy what feels like a “sovereign space.” They don’t sit on the surface; they emerge from a dense atmospheric pressure.

The bright reds and whites of the highlights aren’t blended into the surrounding tones. They’re placed as distinct, loaded deposits of color. Because they remain separate, they create a rhythmic pulse that slows the viewer down, stretching the moment of recognition.

Conclusion: The Painting as a Battery

Ultimately, this magnolia study functions like a battery of stored action. The modest scale of the subject is counterbalanced by the density of the paint. The “delay” we experience is intentional—a gift from the artist. By refusing to offer a quick, smooth, easily digestible image, the painting forces us to truly see.

By prioritizing the physical mark over the illusion of a flower, the work becomes a record of perception itself. It argues that the most meaningful insights happen in the slow, deliberate navigation of a surface that refuses to be ignored.

Wednesday, 18 March 2026

The Davies Interval: A Forensic Reconstruction of the Liminal - David Davies' Moon Rise (1894)


David Davies' Moon Rise (1894)

National Gallery of Victoria 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:David_Davies_Moonrise_1894.jpg

The Davies Interval: A Forensic Reconstruction of the Liminal

In the history of Australian painting, David Davies’ Moonrise (1894) represents a radical departure from the descriptive, nationalistic traditions of the late 19th century. By shifting the focus from the geographic motif to the perceptual event, Davies established a unique territory in the study of light—one defined by a "sovereign" independence from institutional expectations of a "finished" landscape. His work suggests that the true subject of painting is not the land itself, but the structural delay between the eye, the mind, and the canvas.

The Erasure of the Motif

Davies understood that for optics to become the primary subject, the motif had to be neutralized. By selecting the flat, unremarkable terrain of Templestowe, he removed the narrative "noise" of landmarks or heroic figures common in the works of his contemporaries. This was a strategic move to prioritize a scintillating integration of opposing atmospheric hues.

In this flat terrain, the landscape is no longer a "place" to be documented; it is a horizontal axis used to measure the exact moment of transition between solar and lunar frequencies. By stripping away the distractions of topography, Davies allows the viewer to focus entirely on the vibration of light as it shifts from the warm, receding infrared of the earth to the cool, encroaching blue of the night.

The Mechanics of the Space Delay

Unlike the rapid, light-filled sketches of the Heidelberg School, Moonrise is characterized by a dense, almost forensic accumulation of oil traces. This materiality creates a "big space of delay" within the viewing experience, manifesting in two distinct ways:

  • Perceptual Thickness: The atmosphere in Davies’ work is not transparent. It is a heavy, physical residue—a suspension of heat, dust, and cooling air. This density requires the viewer to slow down, allowing the eye to adjust to a lower frequency of light just as one would in the physical world at dusk.

  • Temporal Suspension: Through the careful layering of tones, Davies captures the "liminal traces" of sunlight as they grasp onto the land. This is evidenced with particular savvy in the way the sunlight dully shimmers on the dirt path, caught between the darkening brush of the foreground. This shimmer acts as a lingering optical pulse, even as the moon’s illumination begins to saturate the field. It creates a state of tonal suspension that feels less like a static observation and more like a recorded memory of a vanishing threshold.

The Rejection of the "Finished" Landscape

Davies’ achievement lies in his refusal to adhere to the traditional "finished" concept of Australian landscape painting. In 1894, a completed work usually required resolved forms and a clear focal point. Davies instead offers an unstable threshold—a painting that exists in a state of biological pulse.

In Moonrise, the forms of the scrub and the dirt track are in a constant state of becoming or dissolving. This focus on the structural interval suggests that the most profound truths of the Australian environment are not found in permanent monuments or midday clarity, but in the fleeting, transitional states where one reality bleeds into another.

Conclusion: A Visionary Realization

Decades after first encountering this work at the National Gallery, the realization emerges that Davies was conducting some of the earliest optical research into the Australian experience. By identifying and dwelling within a "timeless space delay," Davies proved that scale is often inversely proportional to focus. He transformed the "nothingness" of a dry paddock into a dense, atmospheric record of how we actually perceive the world at the edge of darkness. In doing so, he moved beyond the role of the painter and into the role of the researcher, documenting the very mechanics of human vision through a non-descript bush paddock that remains a visionary masterpiece of delay.