Sunday, 24 May 2026

Scintillation in Praxis: Material Abrasion and Perceptual Tension


Peter Davidson - Woman Resting 2023 - 26
Oil, Wax and acrylic on wooden panel 
18 cm x 18 cm


Woman Resting developed over roughly three years through repeated cycles of construction, abrasion, and revision. Oil and wax on a wooden panel function not only as a medium for depiction, but as a way of testing how an image can remain unstable while still maintaining emotional and spatial coherence.

At the centre of the work is the idea of scintillation—a condition in which the painting resists settling into passive representation and instead sustains a state of visual tension. The figure is never fully fixed; it both emerges and dissolves through dense impasto, scraped passages, interruptions of colour, and sanded areas that reveal earlier states beneath the surface.

Sanding back the panel became central to the painting’s structure. Acts of removal create a sense of temporal depth, allowing earlier decisions to persist as traces within the layered wax and oil. The work takes on an archaeological quality, where multiple moments of perception coexist. Rather than presenting a resolved image, the painting records an extended process of searching, hesitation, destruction, and recovery.

The material weight of wax and oil slows visual resolution. Flesh tones are not smoothly described but appear embedded within the support itself, creating an ambiguity between emergence and disappearance. This instability is amplified by the fractured green and turquoise field below, whose mosaic-like activity counterbalances the relative stillness of the reclining figure and the cooler geometry of the background.

Throughout, the aim is not narrative description but visual intensity generated through tension and interruption. Abrupt shifts in density, collisions between quiet and active passages, and deliberate surface disruptions slow the viewer’s eye and resist closure.

The painting occupies a threshold between dissolution and resolution. Its final state preserves the sensation of a form continually coming into being while resisting completion—a pictorial space held open through instability, abrasion, and material resistance.


 ピーター・デイヴィッドソン

《Woman Resting》 (2023–26) 油彩、ワックス、アクリル/木製パネル 18 × 18 cm

《Woman Resting》は、およそ三年にわたり、構築・研磨・改変を繰り返すプロセスの中で形成された作品である。木製パネル上の油彩とワックスは、単なる描写の媒体ではなく、イメージがどのように不安定さを保ちながら、情緒的・空間的な統合を失わずに存在し得るかを検証する装置として機能している。

作品の中心にあるのは「シンチレーション(微光・瞬き)」という概念である。これは、絵画が受動的な再現へと落ち着くことを拒み、視覚的緊張を持続させる状態を指す。人物像は決して完全に固定されず、厚いインパスト、削り取られた筆致、色の断片的な介入、そして研磨によって露出する過去の層を通して、現れながら同時に消えもする。

パネルを研磨する行為は、作品構造の中核となった。除去の行為は時間的な深度を生み出し、過去の判断がワックスと油彩の層の中に痕跡として残り続ける。そこには複数の知覚の瞬間が共存する考古学的な質感が生まれる。完成されたイメージを提示するのではなく、作品は探索、逡巡、破壊、回復という長い過程そのものを記録している。

ワックスと油彩の物質的な重さは、視覚的な解像を遅らせる。肌の色調は滑らかな描写としてではなく、支持体に沈み込むように現れ、出現と消失のあいだに揺らぐ曖昧さを生む。この不安定さは、下部に広がる緑とターコイズの破片状のフィールドによってさらに強調される。そのモザイク状の活動性は、横たわる身体の静けさや背景の冷たい幾何学性と対照を成している。

本作の目的は物語的な説明ではなく、緊張と断絶によって生じる視覚的強度である。密度の急激な変化、静と動の衝突、意図的な表面の攪乱が視線の進行を遅らせ、イメージが確定することを拒む。

この絵画は、消滅と解決のあいだにある閾(しきい)状態に位置している。最終的な状態は、形が生成され続けながらも完結を拒む感覚を保持している。作品は、不安定さ、研磨、そして物質的抵抗によって開かれた、固有の絵画空間を成立させている。

Friday, 22 May 2026

THE TIMELESS GAP: APEIRON, PRACTICE, AND THE FORENSIC MARK

   


Peter Davidson - Roadside Iris 2026
Pastel, carbon pencil coloured pencil on coloured paper 
27.5 cm h x 22 cm w



Peter Davidson – The Timeless Gap: Apeiron, Practice, and the Forensic Mark

2026

The work begins on a dark or coloured ground, not simply as a background, but as a perceptual condition — a space where vision has loosened from the external world and has not yet settled into image. I think of this ground as similar to the interior of perception itself: a moment where visual information hovers before it becomes fully recognisable. There is always a delay between seeing and responding. Perception does not arrive complete. It gathers in fragments, adjusts, corrects itself, and slowly stabilises into experience. I do not draw directly from observation. Instead, the work develops inside this perceptual lag — the interval where seeing, memory, and making overlap but never fully align. What appears on the surface is not the world exactly as it was seen, but the residue of perception reorganising itself through the act of drawing.

Drawing becomes a form of reconstruction. Pastel captures scattered pulses of colour and light, while carbon pencil builds temporary structures that hold the image together long enough for it to emerge. The resulting image can feel both fluid and fixed at the same time, as though perception has been caught mid‑transition. Familiar objects often appear subtly altered, not because they are symbolically transformed, but because perception itself is shifting while the image is formed. Making is never a clean translation of vision into image. It is a process shaped by hesitation, correction, interruption, and return. These are not mistakes; they are part of the structure of the work. The finished drawing is not the process itself, but the stabilised trace of that process — a compressed record of decisions made under changing perceptual conditions.

The delay I work within is not only temporal. It also feels like a pre‑visible perceptual field where sensory information has not yet separated into stable categories. I think of this condition as the Apeiron: an unbounded space where image, memory, sensation, rhythm, and pressure overlap before becoming recognisable form. In this state, perception has not fully organised itself. Sensory pathways cross and interfere with one another. Vision may carry traces of rhythm or pressure, while spatial awareness can emerge through tonal movement rather than fixed representation. What reaches the surface is not direct sight, but the nervous system’s attempt to create coherence from overlapping sensations and memories.

The image never arrives all at once. It moves between recognition and dissolution. I describe this as Scintillation — a perceptual shimmer that occurs as competing sensory and cognitive processes try to settle into a coherent structure. This flicker is not only optical; it reflects perception continually reorganising itself while the drawing develops. The viewer encounters the image in this suspended condition, where meaning remains active rather than fully resolved. Within this process, the mark is not simply representation but trace. A line is not only contour; it records pressure, hesitation, rhythm, and correction. Each mark functions as a kind of forensic evidence of perceptual activity. A doubled contour, a shift in pressure, or a broken line marks a moment where perception briefly stabilised before changing again. The drawing gathers these traces as evidence of how perception behaves under unstable conditions.

Some marks act as anchors within this instability. These interruptions allow the image to hold together long enough to be perceived. They are not expressive gestures or decorative flourishes, but structural necessities — temporary points of resolution inside a continually shifting perceptual field. The finished drawing is not intended as a depiction of the external world. It is the stabilised residue of an internal perceptual event — a record of reconstruction taking place within delay. What appears on the surface is not certainty, but evidence of perception reorganising itself through instability, overlap, and correction. The work does not describe perception from the outside; it follows perception as it forms.

Even the frame participates in this process. The gold frame is not decorative; it functions as a perceptual threshold that shapes how light and colour are experienced around the drawing. I became increasingly aware of this after encountering a historical Western landscape painting whose original gold frame had later been muted in a subdued grey‑mauve tone. The alteration seemed to flatten the relationship between image, light, and atmosphere, diminishing the internal luminosity the painting once carried. The reflective warmth of gold sustains and intensifies the drawing’s perceptual field, allowing the image to remain optically active rather than collapsing into the neutrality of clinical display environments. The frame therefore operates as part of the work’s perceptual structure, helping stabilise the image while simultaneously extending its atmosphere into surrounding space.

The artwork does not present a fixed image of the world. It emerges through a perceptual field in which sensory information dissolves, overlaps, flickers, and is repeatedly reconstructed before settling into form. The drawing records this movement: perception passing through the Apeiron, entering delay, oscillating through Scintillation, and arriving on the surface as the forensic mark. The work is not a description of perception. It is the trace of perception becoming image.


I am an artist not a scientist


Thursday, 21 May 2026

Plastic Fruit and Vegetables Still Life, 2026







Peter Davidson – Plastic Fruit and Vegetables Still Life, 2026
Pastel and charcoal on black paper
19 cm × 24.5 cm

The work begins on black pastel paper, in a darkness that resembles the interval between the optic event and the making of the mark — a space illuminated not by the external world, but by the nervous system reconstructing what the eye has just received. Using pastel and carbon on this black ground, I treat the surface not as empty space but as a field of delay: a moment in which perception has left the eye but has not yet stabilized into image.

Rather than drawing from direct observation, I work from this internal lag. The marks emerge from the mind processing what it has just seen.

Pastel records scattered fragments of colour and light, while carbon pencil imposes structure, cutting boundaries into an otherwise unstable field. The resulting image is not a transcription of the world but a reconstruction. As perception stabilizes, forms become intensified, clarified, and strangely artificial. Fruits and vegetables acquire the fixed, polished quality of plastic objects: less like living matter than manufactured replicas.

This tension is central to the work. The process is slow, uncertain, and rooted in perceptual instability; the result is precise, static, and seemingly synthetic. Each drawing records this transformation, where the mind’s internal mechanics produce an image that feels more permanent than the reality from which it emerged.

People sometimes ask why I place certain works in gold frames. Gold interacts with colour differently from the neutral surfaces favoured by the white cube. It reflects warmth and depth, amplifying the drawing’s internal light rather than flattening it. By contrast, the white-cube aesthetic can feel deadening to me — its neutrality draining atmosphere and reducing the work to an inert object. The gold frame restores a sense of presence. It creates a boundary that vibrates with the image rather than suppressing it.


Monday, 18 May 2026

The Shifting Hues of Japan’s Spring Flowers: Time as a Space of Perception

 



The Shifting Hues of Japan’s Spring Flowers: Time as a Space of Perception

Peter Davidson 

Pastel on paper, 2026, 28 cm h x 22 cm w

The Shifting Hues of Japan’s Spring Flowers begins from a clear but radical idea: time is not a line. It is a space. The work does not show a single moment in late‑May twilight. Instead, it maps the perceptual space in which that moment becomes visible. Here, “time” is not a sequence of minutes but a field of delay, adjustment, and reconstruction. The pastel sits inside the Davidson Hypothesis, which holds that we never meet the present directly—we meet the perceptual space that forms after it.

This is not a rejection of Einstein’s spacetime. It simply shifts the focus. Einstein describes the structure of the universe. My work describes the inner space where perception happens. And I have always felt that I live by a pulse, not a clock—this pastel makes that pulse visible.

In this practice, the delay between seeing and acting is not a gap in time. It is the space where perception becomes possible. Two Dogs Art Space has shown this for years: people may stand in the same yard, but they inhabit different perceptual spaces, not synchronized timelines. Art comes from these offsets, not from chronological order.

The pastel makes this spatial condition clear. Yellow blossoms push forward against broken blue passages that never settle into sky, river, or shadow. The eye must move through shifting relationships. Nothing is fixed. Nothing is singular. The image behaves like a perceptual landscape, not a traditional scene. You move through it the way you move through twilight—by constant recalibration.

Twilight is essential. As daylight fades into blue, colour stops acting like a marker of time (“evening”) and becomes a spatial pressure. In the pastel, the yellows shift—gold, acid‑green, orange, pale white—depending on their relationship to the surrounding blues and blacks. These are not flowers in time. They are states within a perceptual field.

Pastel strengthens this effect. Its powdery surface catches and scatters light, so the image changes as the viewer moves. The work refuses the idea of a stable, fixed view. It behaves like perception itself: responsive, unstable, always slightly ahead or behind the viewer’s attempt to hold it still. The surface becomes a material version of perceptual delay.

The mark‑making shows how the image is built. Each stroke responds to a condition that has already changed. The painting grows through overlapping perceptual fragments. What appears is not a single moment but a field of delayed recognitions. This is time understood as space—perception unfolding across intervals rather than along a line.

The subject matter reinforces this. Japanese spring is not a single event but a layered field of different bloom cycles. Flowers emerge, peak, and fade at different rhythms. These are not temporal differences but spatial offsets in perception. The riverbank becomes a place where multiple durations coexist without ever lining up.

The river itself is a metaphor for delay. Water never gives a fixed image; it gives distortion, reflection, and constant change. The riverbank becomes a threshold where certainty dissolves into colour and movement. It is a space of becoming, not a record of what was.

Importantly, the work does not illustrate theory. The ideas are built into the structure of the image. Compressed spaces, dark interruptions, and mosaic‑like pastel marks act as perceptual tools. The dark gaps function as resets—places where perception must start again. Vision becomes discontinuous and reconstructive, echoing the spatial nature of delay.

The painting challenges the belief that art records the world in time. Instead, it shows that art records the space in which the world becomes visible. The image does not capture 6:47 PM. It captures the perceptual construction of that moment across spatialised delay. In this framework, time is not a clock. It is a pulse of perception, a field of offsets, a space of becoming.

In this way, the pastel reveals what my work has been circling for years: time is not a line but a space we move through. A pulse of perception. A shifting field of offsets. The space where the world becomes visible. 

Note: I'm an artist not a scientist. 


Sunday, 17 May 2026

The Curvature of Delay: Painting, Perceptual Residue, and the Davidson Hypothesis



Delay and Apeiron is a strange place its where many great paintings have emerged from its structure but so little  is understood  Peter Davidson No 8, 18/5/2026

 

The Curvature of Delay: Painting, Perceptual Residue, and the Davidson Hypothesis


Painting is often described as a translation of the external world into image. Whether realist or abstract, the underlying assumption tends to be that perception flows smoothly from object to observer before becoming representation. The Davidson Hypothesis challenges this. Instead of treating perception as immediate, it proposes that seeing unfolds through measurable and experiential delay. Painting becomes not a depiction of objects, but an inquiry into the unstable interval through which perception reconstructs the world.

Perceptual delay is not speculative.

In optics and neuroscience, visual processing takes time: light reaches the retina, signals travel through neural pathways, and the brain assembles these signals into coherent experience. What feels like continuous vision is already a reconstruction shaped by temporal displacement.

The Davidson Hypothesis extends this observable delay into the aesthetic domain. It proposes that perception unfolds within what I call a curvature of delay—a field in which sensory information is filtered, reorganised, and stabilised into recognisable form. This is not a scientific mechanism but a conceptual model drawn from studio practice. Delay becomes an active perceptual architecture. Painting operates inside this architecture, attempting to register the unstable residues that exist before perception fully resolves into objecthood.

Within this framework, apeiron refers not to mystical infinity but to an indeterminate perceptual ground: the unresolved sensory substrate from which recognition gradually emerges. It is the fluid field where sensation has not yet been organised into identifiable objects. Over a lifetime, residues of perceptual delay accumulate within this field. Through certain triggers—painting, music, domestic objects, smell, light—fragments of these latent residues can be reactivated.

Painting, in this sense, becomes a form of aesthetic harvesting. The work does not attempt to preserve memory as fixed image. Instead, it extracts unstable sensory residues moving through the curvature of delay. Colour, gesture, interruption, and surface become instruments for registering the reconstruction of perception itself.

Here, colour is operational rather than descriptive. It emerges through perceptual recall, instability, and reconstruction rather than direct transcription. The painted surface records fractures between stimulus and reconstruction. Hesitations, interruptions, chromatic shifts, and unresolved edges become evidence of temporal displacement within the act of seeing.

The paintings often focus on ordinary domestic objects—sake bottles, cups, chairs, table edges, mushrooms, corners of familiar rooms. These are not symbolic props. Their ordinariness allows them to function as perceptual anchors. Repeated encounters across years saturate them with accumulated sensory residue. They become dense triggers capable of reactivating stored fields of sensation.

This emphasis on minor objects aligns with a kind of forensic rhopography: the close examination of overlooked material subjects as sites of perceptual inquiry. The domestic object becomes a stabilising structure within an otherwise unstable field of reconstruction. Through repetition, these motifs act almost as calibration devices within an ongoing investigation of delay.

Scale also matters. Many works are executed on intimate panels—16 × 12 cm or 18 × 18 cm. These compressed surfaces intensify concentration and restrict the perceptual field. Instead of expanding into spectacle, the paintings condense perceptual pressure into small spatial volumes. The viewer must approach closely, amplifying the visibility of interruption, instability, and reconstruction.

Crucially, the theoretical language emerged after the paintings themselves. The Davidson Hypothesis was not an abstract system imposed on practice. It developed retrospectively through repeated encounters with perceptual instability, delayed recognition, chromatic drift, and the resistance between observation and execution. The paintings generated the need for terminology. Language followed material experience.

This distinction matters. It positions the studio as the primary research engine. The paintings are not illustrations of theory; they are the conditions through which the theory arose. The writing attempts to stabilise recurring perceptual events already encountered through years of practice.

The task now is not to preserve the theory as a closed doctrine but to continue testing its value within painting. If delay remains productive, it must keep generating new perceptual discoveries rather than merely explaining previous works. The framework must remain open to refinement, contradiction, and collapse.

Ultimately, the Davidson Hypothesis proposes that painting is not a window onto the world but a record of the spatial reconstruction through which the world becomes visible—a visual document of sensation negotiating a displaced reality before stabilising into form.

Note: I'm an artist not a scientist.


Friday, 15 May 2026

The Anatomy of Doubt: Dynamic Forces and Structural Architecture in Freud and Davidson

 




The Anatomy of Doubt: Dynamic Forces and Structural Architecture in Freud and Davidson


A paradox sits at the centre of any serious study of consciousness: the more precisely we map its structures, the harder it becomes to explain how they function. This is not failure but a condition of the work. Freud’s uncertainty about psychic forces parallels the doubt within the Davidson Hypothesis about perceptual delay. Both offer durable structures, yet both encounter productive uncertainty where structure becomes lived experience. As an artist rather than a scientist or psychoanalyst, I take this not as weakness but as a shared research ground.

The Intact Structure: Mapping the Invisible

Both psychoanalysis and the Davidson Hypothesis establish coherent frameworks. Freud mapped the mind into Ego, Id, and Superego, showing how dreams, slips, and jokes expose unconscious processes. Behaviour is never direct; it is shaped by layered, unseen activity.

The Davidson Hypothesis proposes an equivalent spatial structure of vision:

  • The Apeiron — the unresolved, pre-visible field

  • The Curvature of Delay — the temporal lag as perception organises itself

  • Strategic Interruptions — the visible traces of that process on the surface

Both systems hold. Freud pointed to recurring patterns of neurosis; the studio reveals vibrating lines or the compressed intensity of a small panel as evidence of perception in motion.

The Horizon of Doubt: How the Machinery Moves

The shared doubt is not about whether the structure exists, but how it operates. Freud never fully resolved how psychic energy becomes symptom, or how repression selects its targets. He revised his models repeatedly, acknowledging that while the architecture held, its forces remained partially obscure.

The Davidson Hypothesis faces a similar limit. It demonstrates that perception unfolds within an unstable interval, and that painting works inside this interval. But the mechanism resists full explanation:

  • How does accumulated sensory residue remain dormant until an ordinary object activates it?

  • How does perception decide what to retain and what to discard within delay?

As stated in Drawing No. 7: “we don’t know how it works, but there is a  path.of its function ” The structure appears in the trace; the engine does not.

Doubt as the Research Engine

In science, doubt is often treated as a problem to eliminate. In psychoanalysis and in the studio, it is what sustains the work.

Freud’s uncertainty kept psychoanalysis open rather than doctrinal. For the artist, complete understanding would collapse the practice into illustration. It is uncertainty that produces tension in the hand. The panel becomes a site of risk, where the world meets the biology of sight and something unforeseen emerges.

Every Mark is Evidence

The connection between Freud’s hesitation and the doubt within the Davidson Hypothesis points to a simple claim: the trace is sufficient.

We do not need a complete account of the mechanism to confirm its reality. Freud worked with speech; the painter works with marks. Each brushstroke, colour shift, or unresolved edge is a material residue of perception passing through delay.

Doubt is not a flaw in the system. It is the condition that allows the work to remain alive.



Thursday, 14 May 2026

The Curvature of Delay: Aesthetic Harvesting within the Davidson Hypothesis


Sake cup and bottle May 2026
pastel on black paper
21cm x 21 

 

The Curvature of Delay: Aesthetic Harvesting within the Davidson Hypothesis

Painting is often framed as a translation of the external world into image — a linear movement from object to representation. Within the Davidson Hypothesis, this assumption dissolves. Rather than documenting the “outside‑in” world, painting becomes a means of examining the internal mechanics of perception itself. In small panels such as the 18 × 18 cm depiction of a sake cup and bottle from a maternal lounge room, the aim is not to preserve memory as a fixed image, but to harvest the unstable optical residue that exists before perception settles into recognisable form. The work operates inside the interval where seeing is still unresolved.

At the centre of this framework is the concept of delay. The Davidson Hypothesis proposes that perception does not occur in a smooth, continuous flow through time and space. Instead, it unfolds within an expanded field of delay — a curved spatial volume through which sensory information is displaced, filtered, and reorganised. Named in honour of the artist’s parents, this “curvature of delay” is not a pause in time but a perceptual architecture. It is the space in which the nervous system negotiates the incoming visual field before it stabilises into coherent objects. Painting becomes a method of aesthetic harvesting: an attempt to capture the shifting residues of sight as they move through this curved perceptual field.

Within this condition, colour is not a descriptive tool but an operational one. It is generated through imagination and perceptual recall rather than literal transcription. The painted surface functions through several interdependent states. Scintillation marks the unstable threshold between sensation and recognition, where colour behaves as an optical event rather than a representational device. Apeiron forms the indeterminate perceptual ground — a pre-visible field from which objects gradually emerge. Strategic Interruptions appear as fractures, hesitations, and residues within the surface. These marks document the interval between the initial stimulus (t₀) and its reconstructed image (t₀ + D). Oil, acrylic, and wax become recording instruments for this movement through delay, registering micro-events in perception rather than depicting stable forms.

This methodology extends into the choice of subject matter. By focusing on minor domestic objects — a sake cup, bottle, chair, or table edge — the work engages a form of forensic rhopography: the elevation of overlooked material subjects into sites of perceptual inquiry. These objects are not symbolic props or nostalgic references. They are instruments through which the architecture of perception can be examined. Their ordinariness is precisely what allows them to function as stable anchors within an unstable perceptual field.

Scale plays a crucial role in this process. The small dimensions of the panels — often 16 × 12 cm or 18 × 18 cm — compress the perceptual field, intensifying concentration. The confined surface forces both painter and viewer into close engagement, amplifying the density of delay within a limited spatial volume. The paintings become micro-laboratories in which the curvature of delay can be observed at high resolution.


Note: Im an artist not a scientist but I am curious of how painting/ drawing works