Hasegawa Tohaku - Pine Trees (Shōrin-zu byōbu) - left hand screen
2Dogs Art Space: The Sovereign Framework
2Dogs Art Space is an independent research center dedicated to the Davidson Hypothesis: the study of the structural delay (t₀ → t₀ + D) between the moment of perception and the act of making.
I do not approach drawing as a record of history. Instead, it is treated as an investigation into the physics of being alive.
Consider Pine Trees (Shōrin‑zu byōbu) by Hasegawa Tōhaku. The work depicts mist drifting through pine trees, rendered in ink on paper with extraordinary restraint. What is remarkable is that the viewer encounters the work in essentially the same perceptual field as the artist who made it. The marks remain exactly where the artist stopped—at the moment when visual intensity reached its apogee.
What I observe is not merely an artifact of art history. We are looking at the residual traces of ink left at the moment when perception, delay, and gesture converged. The artist worked through the lag between optical stimulus and neural response—an image formed in the brain and translated into another image through studio praxis. The drawing becomes a record of this temporal delay: perception arriving in the body and resolving itself in matter.
Core Principles
I. The Pulse, Not the Clock
Institutions operate according to Clock-Time—deadlines, movements, prizes, and historical narratives.
The artist works according to the Pulse.
At 2Dogs Art Space we reclaim the Sovereign Space: a territory where the body encounters pressure, latency, resistance, and duration rather than chronological order.
II. The Optical Tissue
Drawing is a spatial negotiation.
It begins when photons strike the retina and neural signals ripple through the tissue of the nervous system. The mark on paper is the final anchoring of an energetic residue.
To draw is to navigate the inherent lag of perception.
III. Forensic Rhopography
I practice a disciplined attention to the trivial and the peripheral.
By focusing on the rhopos—the overlooked fragment, the minor detail—we extend what we call the Field of Delay. In this space, the drawing develops according to its own internal logic rather than submitting to external narrative structures.
IV. The Sovereign Space
The studio is a sovereign territory.
It exists prior to description and prior to institutional expansion. Our aim is not to “expand the field” of drawing, but to inhabit its original and infinite depth.
The artwork is not the body. It is the afterimage—the ghost of a photon that has already passed, anchored in graphite. The studio functions as a laboratory for perception, where the marks reveal the unfolding process of being alive. It is not a finished object, but a field in which the physics of perception can be traced.
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