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.
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.






