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
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

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