Monday, 6 April 2026

The Davidson Hypothesis: Art Emerges from the Aperion

 


Peter Davidson - Cherry Blosooms

pastel pencil charcoal on F4 pastel Paper

The Davidson Hypothesis states that artists cannot act on reality directly. This is not due to a lack of speed or a "lag"—it is a structural necessity. Recognition requires distance. Without displacement, nothing can appear as "something."

This necessary space is the Aperion (D).


The Charged Vacuum

In studio praxis, the Aperion is the workspace itself—a "sovereign space" where the outside world is suspended. While it functions as a structural vacuum, it is far from empty. It is a charged field where perception is transformed into action, and seeing becomes the physical mark.

The relationship is expressed as:

R → D → A

  • Reality (R): The external source; that which is seen.
  • Aperion (D): The charged displacement between perception and action.
  • Action (A): The marks that appear on the surface (the residue).

This is not a sequence in time; it is a structural relationship. Art does not follow reality; it emerges from the Aperion—the space that makes recognition possible.


Note on Studio Praxis

2Dogs Art Space acts as a laboratory for this displacement. While we may share a physical environment, we inhabit offset realities. Every gesture on the 18 cm × 18 cm surface happens within this charged gap. It is here, in the displacement between seeing and making, that the hypothesis is tested.

All studio praxis happens within the Aperion.

Friday, 3 April 2026

The Art of the Delay: Reflections on David Hockney, Katsushika Hokusai, and the Studio

 



Kobe magnolia heavy industry sunset

Oil, wax, acrylic on wooden panel

12 cm h × 18 cm w



The Art of the Delay: Reflections on David Hockney, Katsushika Hokusai, and the Studio

At 88 years old, David Hockney recently warned the art world: “There’s much too much abstract painting being done now.” I don’t believe Hockney is attacking abstraction itself. Instead, he is questioning art that lacks a deep connection to the world. For me, the real power of painting lies in what I call the Davidson Hypothesis (t → t + D). This is the idea that art isn't a direct copy of what we see; it is a response that happens after a structural delay (D).

The "Sovereign Space"

Between the moment our eyes see something and the moment our hand makes a mark, there is a "Sovereign Space." This is where our nervous system processes what we’ve observed. What eventually appears on the canvas—like this Kobe magnolia against an industrial sunset—isn't just a flower. It is a reimagined image built from fragments and residues of memory.

While masters like Paul Cézanne and Hockney intuitively understood this gap between optics and the brush, they didn’t formalize it as a biological necessity. In my studio praxis, I treat this delay as the very place where art is born.

Why "Newness" Still Matters

There is a common mistake in art: thinking that there is "nothing new" left to do. But if you honestly paint your own way of seeing, something original will always happen. History shows us this through movements like Impressionism, which found unity by embracing the diversity of individual perception.

The Wisdom of Age

Hokusai famously said he didn’t create anything truly good until he was seventy. Now that I am in the latter half of my sixties, I understand what he meant. There is a specific focus that comes with sustained studio praxis within the sovereign space across many epochs. By looking closely at small, often overlooked details of our environment—a process I call Forensic Rhopography—we find that the world remains an endless source of discovery.

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

The Architecture of Delay: Rethinking Drawing in the Digital Age


Study of Samurai Nagasaki
pencil pen and ink gold acrylic paint and white pastel pencil - f4 pastel paper


 

Drawing is often imagined as immediate, as if the eye simply transfers what it sees directly to the hand. But drawing is never truly instant. There is always a delay between seeing and making, and it is within this delay that the real work happens.

Working from a digital image makes this especially clear. Unlike drawing from life, where you are surrounded by sound, movement, and atmosphere, the digital image is static and reduced. It holds only visual information, stripped of its original context. Yet this limitation is also its strength. The image can be paused, studied, edited, and returned to. It becomes something you can think through rather than simply react to.

This changes the process. Instead of copying, you begin reconstructing. The image on the screen is no longer a fixed reality but a kind of residue—something incomplete that must be reanimated through memory and experience. What you draw is shaped not only by what you see, but by what you remember and how your body has previously encountered the world.

At the same time, this does not replace drawing from life. Direct observation still offers something essential: a full, unstable, and embodied experience that cannot be reduced to a screen. Working between these two conditions—life and image—expands the practice rather than limiting it.

In both cases, however, the outcome is the same in one fundamental way: a drawing is never the thing itself. Everything passes through the human nervous system before it becomes a mark. The original experience is already an interpretation, and drawing interprets it again. What begins as optical experience becomes an internal construction before it ever reaches the page.

This leads to a simple but important idea: drawing is an imagination of an imagination.

This does not weaken drawing—it defines it. A drawing is not a copy of the world, but a record of how the world has been perceived, processed, and reconstructed. What remains on the page is the trace—the residue—of that process: not reality itself, but evidence of how reality has been understood and made.

Monday, 30 March 2026

The Sovereignty of Delay: Realism as a Physiological Construct


Peter Davidson - Untitled studio praxis 
pencil coloured pencil on pastel paper F4

In the traditional discourse of art history, "realism" is often categorized as a stylistic destination—a faithful mimicry of the external world achieved through technical prowess. However, a practitioner-led inquiry into the mechanics of making reveals a more complex physiological truth: realism is not a result, but a negotiated space governed by the structural delay between perception and action. This "Sovereign Space" of delay suggests that what we recognize as a realistic representation is actually a reimagining of neural residues left upon the nervous system.

The Myth of the Instantaneous

The fundamental error in "outside-in" art history is the assumption of a direct, uninterrupted circuit between the eye and the hand. In studio practice, particularly when working with tactile mediums like pastel on paper, one becomes acutely aware of the optical interval. Whether the artist is looking from the motif to the panel or returning to a work after a period of absence—be it a trip to the market or a month-long holiday—the space of delay is always present.

This delay is an inescapable biological constraint. As optical data moves through the nervous system, it is not preserved as a perfect "photograph." Instead, it is processed as a residue—a flickering, decaying trace of the original encounter. The artist does not draw the object; they draw the afterimage vibrating within their own physiology.

Realism as Articulation

If the raw optical data is inherently fleeting, then realism must be redefined. It is not "truth to nature," but rather the imagination’s ability to articulate that neural residue into a recognizable form. Within the Sovereign Space—that gap between the intake of light and the marking of the surface—the imagination performs a reconstructive act. It takes the "optical jelly" of raw sensation and solidifies it into a mark that the viewer can identify as a pumpkin, a chili, or a strawberry.

In this context, realism is a "space" where the imagination negotiates with the surviving traces of the nervous system. It is an internal architecture. When an artist finishes a drawing in "less studio space" (with high efficiency) or after a long delay, the task remains the same: to bridge the gap between the perceived and the made. The "arbitrary" nature of how one uses their studio time simply dictates the volume of the space the imagination must fill.

The Forensic Observation of the Trivial

To navigate this space of delay, the artist employs a disciplined observation of the overlooked—a method of forensic rhopography. By focusing on the trivial details of a motif, the practitioner grounds the imagination, preventing it from drifting into mere generalization. This focus intensifies when the scale is reduced; a small panel forces a concentration of the "worker’s language," ensuring that the reimagined residue remains potent.

Conclusion

Correcting the art-historical narrative requires moving away from the "silos" of academic theory and returning to the physiology of the maker. Realism is not a mirror; it is a manifestation of the Davidson Hypothesis (t0 → t0 + D), where D represents the delay that allows for the sovereign act of reimagining. By recognizing realism as a space of articulation rather than a style of imitation, we acknowledge the true role of the artist: a researcher of the interval, translating the residues of the nervous system into a shared, recognizable reality.

Saturday, 28 March 2026

The Engine Room of the Gaze: Beyond Hockney’s Horizon



The Japanese spring flowers by the side of the road
Oil wax acrylic on wooden panel
21cm h x 18 cm w


The Engine Room of the Gaze: Beyond Hockney’s Horizon

“This paper proposes a conceptual model rather than an empirically verified neuroscientific theory.”

The Engine Room of the Gaze: Beyond Hockney’s Horizon

“This paper proposes a conceptual model rather than an empirically verified neuroscientific theory.”

The Refusal of the Instant (t0)

Traditional art theory—and even aspects of David Hockney’s account—rests on the assumption of an instantaneous relation between the world and the mark. This imagined instant, t0, suggests that seeing and making coincide.

This instant does not exist. There is no direct contact between the eye and the hand. What intervenes is not emptiness but process: a field of activity in which signals are received, disturbed, and reorganized before they become action. What appears as immediacy is a constructed effect.

Against the Clock

The language of delay implies a measurable timeline, as if the brain were governed by a clock. It is not. There is no central clock in the brain. There is no uniform time against which perception unfolds. Instead, the brain operates through distributed activity—bursts, pulses, and interruptions—none of which are equal, and none of which are synchronized in advance.

What we call “time” is not something the brain follows; it is something produced as these uneven events are brought into relation. There is sequence without measure.

Interruption and Construction

Perception is not continuous. It is composed. Signals arrive as discrete disturbances within a field. These interruptions do not form a stable image on their own. The brain does not passively receive the world; it actively resolves these disturbances into a coherent appearance.

What is experienced as a seamless present is the result of this resolution: an ordering of interruptions into stability. The “instant” is therefore not a point in time, but an achievement—an effect of successful construction.

The Structural Condition (D)

What we call a “delay” (D) is not a gap measured in seconds, but a condition of misalignment within this field of activity. Different processes do not coincide. They interfere, overlap, and fail to resolve perfectly. This condition is not an error—it is fundamental.

D names the instability that must be overcome for perception to appear continuous.

Scintillation and the Residue of Making

In ordinary perception, this instability is concealed. The world appears stable because the brain resolves it. But in sustained acts of looking—especially in painting—this resolution can falter.

In works like The Japanese Spring Flowers by the Side of the Road (21 cm × 18 cm), the small scale forces a high-pressure focus. When the artist works at this limit of discrimination, the construction of the image becomes visible. The result is Scintillation: a vibration or shimmer that belongs neither to the object nor the medium, but to the process of resolution itself. This is the residue of construction becoming perceptible.

Forensic Rhopography

Through the focused depiction of minor or “trivial” details, the artist forces perception beyond its habitual shortcuts. This practice—Forensic Rhopography—does not represent the world more accurately; it exposes the instability underlying its appearance. The image is no longer a window. It becomes a record of negotiation between interruption and coherence.

Conclusion: The Engine Room

The camera, as David Hockney observed, is problematic because it fixes a single, artificial instant. But human perception is no less constructed. There is no transparent access to reality; there is only the continuous production of it.

Painting does not capture the world—it enters the process by which the world is made visible. The true site of painting is not the image, but the Engine Room in which interruptions are forced into coherence.

There is no instant. There is no clock. There is only the ongoing resolution of a world that does not arrive whole.

I wrote this paper because of what David Hockeny (he is a painter I have admired greatly) stated in this article: https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/david-hockney-abstract-art-serpentine-galleries-1234778992

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/sep/26/david-hockney-what-turns-a-picture-into-a-masterpiece#:~:text=It%20takes%20a%20certain%20amount,it%20because%20the%20eye%20moves.&text=When%20a%20human%20being%20is,%2C%20you're%20hardly%20there.

Friday, 27 March 2026

Artistic Perception: Traversing Space and Drift

 


Artistic Perception: Traversing Space and Drift
Its a bit like thinking of stretching and stretching 


Artistic perception is not about waiting for time to pass — it is about moving, stretching, and negotiating space. In the physical world, this movement is the distance the artist traverses between self and object, a spatial offset D that becomes the site of engagement. In digital media, the same logic applies at a micro-scale: the gesture of the hand and the sensor’s recording are separated by a micro-drift δ, a tiny space that the artist must negotiate.

When light enters the eye, it transforms into energy — a viscous jelly, the residue of optics on the nervous system. This residue is recalibrated in the timeless space of delay, where stretching becomes the engine of temporal tension. Across body, mind, and medium, this stretched delay is translated into marks: pencil lines, oil traces, brush strokes.

In every case, art emerges in the space between intention and experience. Whether navigating the macro gap of the physical world, the micro drift of digital interaction, or the subtle residue of neural perception, the act of crossing the gap — of stretching — generates the artwork itself. Delay is not denied; it is embodied, spatialized, and productive, the felt consequence of perception in motion.


Simple version

"Artistic perception isn’t just about time passing—it’s about moving through the gap. Whether it’s the physical distance in a studio, the tiny 'micro-drift' in a digital sensor, or the 'jelly-like' residue in our own nervous system, the act of stretching across that space is what creates the art. The artwork isn't just a record of what we saw; it's the result of the tension created while crossing that delay."

Thursday, 26 March 2026

The Architecture of Seeing: Focus, Scale, and the Power of Delay

 


Peter Davidson - Egg (reworked)
pencil felt tip pen on paper
15 cm x 10 cm


Open-Source Research: Perception, Reconstruction, and the Space of Delay

The Myth of the Snapshot

In the world of the spectator, making an image is often mistaken for a "snapshot"—a quick moment where the eye and hand synchronize to capture a present reality. But the reality of the studio tells a different story. An image is not a product of the "now"; it is a reconstruction built within a "timeless delay." By examining the gap between when our eyes fire and when our hands move, we see that painting is not about the object itself. It is about the residue of the gaze—the structural trace that remains after we stop looking.

The Inverse Law: Small Scale, Huge Focus

A core principle of this "inside-out" approach is the maxim: "Scale is inversely proportional to focus." This is not merely a preference for size; it is a strategy for the density of attention. In the tradition of Chardin’s intimate still-lifes, and in my own 18 cm x 18 cm panels, the small frame acts as its own "mini-universe."

By working small, the artist eliminates the mechanical "noise" of large-arm movement, allowing the perceptual flicker—the vibrating energy of the subject—to stay at its peak. The small scale does not diminish the subject; it intensifies the focus. It forces the viewer to lean in and engage with a high-frequency map of visual data, where every mark is an essential coordinate.

Memory as Reconstruction, Not Storage

Memory is often mistaken for a form of storage—a place where events are held intact, waiting to be replayed. But memory does not function as a recording device. It does not retrieve the past as it was; it reconstructs it.

Each act of recall is not a return, but a rebuilding. What we call memory is an ongoing process in which fragments of an event—its visual, spatial, and sensory residues—are reassembled in the present. These residues do not persist as complete images. They remain as partial structures: traces, anchors, and distortions that survive the initial act of seeing. Imagination operates within this field, guided and constrained by these residual structures. The remembered image emerges through a negotiation between what remains and what must be filled in.

The Laboratory of Studio Praxis

The delay between an event and its recall is not an empty void. It is an active space where perception is filtered, reduced, and reorganized. In the studio, we reject the "clock" in favor of the "pulse." We are born with a rhythm, not a timetable.

By returning to a motif, such as an egg, after months of studio praxis, the artist is no longer painting a surface. They are painting the residue of optics through accumulated revisions. Each return subtly alters the structure of the memory itself. The resulting marks—the colorful crosshairs and structural scaffolding—are the "Worker’s Language" of the brain. They are the diagnostic maps showing the "HUD" (Heads-Up Display) of the maker’s mind as it anchors and rebuilds the image within the long silence of the delay.

Conclusion: The Sovereign Space

To create an "inside-out" image, one must accept the delay. If human imagination in delay is the only way we can truly build an image, then a painting is the physical evidence of that reconstruction.

"Whether condensed into an 18 cm panel or expanded into a scaffold of marks on paper, the goal remains the same: to document the vibration of sight as it survives the gauntlet of neurological travel. The result is a Sovereign Space—a living residue, forged in the delay and held taut by the act of recall."