When you look at a Leonardo da Vinci drawing today — perhaps preserved in a museum — you are experiencing something remarkable. The photons entering your eyes are entirely new, yet the influence of the artwork persists. How can something so old still affect you?
The answer is structure in space, not time. Influence does not travel through clocks or physics; it is embedded in spatial patterns that endure.
1. Energy Meets Structure
Each photon interacting with your eyes carries energy:
Where:
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= energy of the photon
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= Planck’s constant
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= frequency of light
The photon’s energy is new, but the pattern of pigments and canvas remains the same. Influence persists through structure, not through temporal flow.
2. Structure Survives in Space
Why does da Vinci’s influence survive centuries?
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Pigment molecules stay in place.
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Paper or canvas resists decay.
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Museums maintain stability against environmental factors.
This persistence is structural, entirely free of classical time or academic theory.
3. Influence Depends on the Observer
Not every observer experiences art the same way:
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Humans perceive color, detail, and composition.
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Other species interpret light and motion differently.
We can express an observer’s experience as:
The structure persists, while each observer reconstructs its influence differently.
4. Decay as Spatial Interaction
When an artwork begins to deteriorate — fading pigments, fraying fibers — this is not the passage of time. It results from interactions in space:
Environmental factors like air, water, and light cause decay. Time is not involved; only space and relational influence matter.
5. Space Over Time
Scientific models often impose temporal constructs because they are easier to measure, but this does not mean time is the most accurate or best way to understand fine art. A spatial-relational reading aligns more closely with how artworks actually exist and how aesthetic influence is encoded.
Even studies like Meng et al.’s, which describe the “temporal progression of aesthetic judgments” in dynamic generative art, can be understood differently: what they measure is an observation of relational change, not a fundamental property of the artwork itself. Art’s influence persists in its structure, and observers interact with that structure anew
Meng, P., Meng, X., Hu, R., & Zhang, L. (2023). Predicting the aesthetics of dynamic generative artwork based on statistical image features: A time-dependent model. PLOS ONE, 18(9), e0291647. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291647
6. Putting It Together
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Space is primary: The pattern exists and persists.
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Influence flows from interaction: Observers and environment interact with the structure.
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Observers are unique: Each reconstructs influence differently.
Space is primary: The pattern exists and persists.
Influence flows from interaction: Observers and environment interact with the structure.
Observers are unique: Each reconstructs influence differently.
Mathematically:
What survives is the pattern itself, not photons or any temporal measure.
7. Why This Matters
This perspective reshapes how we think about art and perception:
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Art is persistent structure, free from classical time and academic theory.
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Influence exists purely through interaction in space.
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Decay and disappearance occur because structures collide with environmental elements, not because “time passes.”
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Every work of art becomes a bridge across space — a timeless connection, reconstructed anew by every observer.
Conclusion
Looking at a centuries-old drawing is not just observing ink and paper. It is experiencing timeless influence: a connection embedded in space, preserved in patterns, and flowing through relational interactions — entirely beyond classical temporal frameworks.

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