Study of unresolved perception
ink/pen , felt tip pen, coloured pencil on 330g paper
18 cm h x 13 cm w
The Architecture of Perception: Apeiron, Delay, Scintillation, Strategic Interruptions, and the Sovereign Space
Introduction: The Collapse of Sequential Seeing
In the Davidson Framework, perception is not treated as a sequence of moments that accumulate into a coherent picture of reality. Instead, perception is understood as a continuous field that is later divided into “moments” only for the sake of description. The studio becomes the site where this division can be slowed, examined, and sometimes refused.
This framework does not claim to measure neural processes; it uses the known existence of perceptual latency as a conceptual architecture for studio practice. The aim is not to describe the brain, but to describe the conditions under which perception becomes visible as structure.
The five components of this architecture — Apeiron, Delay, Scintillation, Strategic Interruptions, and the Sovereign Space — form a single system. Each names a different phase of the same perceptual event.
1. Apeiron: The Pre-Structured Field
The Apeiron is the pre-structured field of potential from which all perceptual structure emerges. It is not a mystical void or a metaphysical claim. It is the condition before form — the undifferentiated field in which perception has not yet been stabilized into identifiable objects.
In ordinary life, the Apeiron is invisible because perception resolves too quickly into recognition. The world appears already sorted, already named, already known.
In the studio, however, the artist can hold perception open long enough to sense the field beneath recognition. The Apeiron is not something the artist sees; it is something the artist feels as the pressure of unformed possibility.
It is the ground from which the image will eventually emerge, but it is not yet an image.
2. Delay: The Interface Between Potential and Form
The Delay is the volumetric gap between the raw impact of reality and its conversion into structure — language, line, or paint. It is not a pause in time. It is the perceptual interval where experience has not yet been organized into form.
The Delay is where the artist works.
Traditional art criticism assumes that perception is sequential: many observations accumulate into a final likeness. But this sequence is already a simplification. What we experience is a continuous field that is later broken into moments for the sake of explanation.
The Delay is the space before this breaking occurs.
It is the interface between the Apeiron and representation — the zone where perception is still fluid, unstable, and unresolved. To work inside the Delay is to resist the premature closure of perception into a single, fixed outcome.
3. Strategic Interruptions: Anchors Inside the Delay
When the artist refuses to collapse perception too quickly into a finished image, certain traces remain visible on the surface. These are Strategic Interruptions.
They are not stylistic flourishes or expressive gestures. They are the physical evidence of decision points — the moments where perception hesitated, shifted, or refused to resolve.
Strategic Interruptions function as:
anchors that prevent the image from collapsing into smooth continuity
coordinates that allow the viewer to reconstruct the perceptual field
residues of the artist’s navigation through the Delay
They preserve instability inside the image. They keep the work open.
A portrait that eliminates these interruptions becomes a closed system — a measurable approximation rather than a living perceptual event.
4. Scintillation: The Oscillation Between Stability and Instability
When structured marks (representation) coexist with unresolved traces (interruptions), the viewer experiences a flicker — a perceptual oscillation between resolution and instability. This is Scintillation.
Scintillation is not an aesthetic shimmer. It is the perceptual effect of toggling between:
the stable form the image offers
the instability that remains visible beneath it
This oscillation is the viewer’s encounter with the Delay.
A portrait is complete, in this framework, not when it resolves into a single likeness, but when the oscillation stabilizes into a coherent field of tension. The image becomes a site where perception remains active rather than a record of what perception once was.
5. The Sovereign Space: The Studio as Perceptual Laboratory
The studio is the Sovereign Space — the controlled environment where perception can be slowed, disrupted, or held open long enough for the architecture of perception to become visible.
It is sovereign because it is governed by the artist’s perceptual laws, not by the demands of representation, narrative, or external expectation.
Inside the Sovereign Space:
the Apeiron becomes accessible
the Delay becomes navigable
Strategic Interruptions become legible
Scintillation becomes possible
The studio is not a retreat from reality. It is the place where reality can be encountered before it is structured into history.
Conclusion: The Image as a Field of Unresolved Perception
When these five components operate together, the resulting image is not a likeness, not a representation, and not a sequential record of observation. It is a structured field of unresolved perception — a forensic document of the moment before experience collapses into form.
Applied to portraiture, this framework shifts the question entirely:
not “How accurately is the sitter represented?”
but “Where does the image preserve the Delay?”
not “Does it resemble the subject?”
but “Does it hold open the field where perception is still active?”
It is the visible architecture of the encounter between the biological system and the infinite.






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