Stuart Davis (painter)

gigatos | May 31, 2022

Summary

Stuart Davis (born December 7, 1892, Philadelphia; died June 24, 1964, New York City) was an American modernist painter and printmaker, best known for his studies of everyday American life, depicted in bright colors. He became famous for adapting the language of jazz music to modern painting.

Youth and education

Stuart Davis was the son of Edward Wyatt Davis and sculptor Helen Stuart Davis. Both parents studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. The mother exhibited her work in Philadelphia and New York. The father was head of the art department of the Philadelphia Press, where he employed his friends John French Sloan, William Glackens, George Luks, and Everett Shinn as illustrators. In 1901 the Davis family moved to East Orange, New Jersey. In 1909, Davis dropped out of high school and spent the next three years studying at the New York Art School of Robert Henri (founder of the grouping The Eight). Although he painted in a realistic style, he rejected academic idealism, urging his students to observe and make studies of urban life as they observed it on the streets, in concert halls, taverns, and elsewhere. Davis”s appreciation of modern and abstract art derived precisely from his interest in the work of future members of the Ashcan School.

Adaptation of the achievements of modernism

In 1913, Davis showed five watercolors at the Armory Show, an international exhibition of modern art that sparked his interest in the art of modernism. The exhibition was dominated by French artists, whose art had the most visible influence on American art. With works by artists such as: Henri Matisse, Georges Braque, Marcel Duchamp and Pablo Picasso, Fauvism and Cubism were extensively displayed. Davis was able to see how avant-garde European artists, such as Henri Matisse and Paul Gauguin, implemented their innovative ideas about modern forms. They used colors that had no relation to reality. Davis became familiar with Cubism, which subjected forms to fragmentation, flattened space, and used words taken from newspaper headlines or product labels as compositional elements in paintings. In the years that followed, Davis made an effort to assimilate the gains of modernism that he had experienced at the Armory Show, especially such things as color, form, and the treatment of the surface and composition of the work. He was aware that the experiences he had gained from his time with Robert Henri were no longer sufficient.

From 1911 to 1916, Davis worked as an illustrator and cartoonist for The Masses magazine, continuing his experimentation with various styles, including Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, and Cubism. His many paintings from 1916-1919, such as Gloucester Street (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), Garage (1917, Collection of Earl Davis), and Gas Station (1917, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden), were characterized by bold colors and fluid, energetic brushstrokes. After two summers spent in Provincetown, Massachusetts, Davis became interested in the New England coast, becoming a regular in Gloucester during the summer seasons until 1934. Inspired by the paintings of Cézanne, Gauguin, Matisse, and van Gogh, he painted colorful landscapes and harbor scenes. In 1921, he produced some of the most abstract works of his career, including paintings that took as their subject cigarette packs, labels, light bulbs, mouthwash bottles, salt shakers, and egg whisks, all inspired by Dadaism. Their example is the painting Lucky Strike (1921, Museum of Modern Art) showing a precisely painted pack of cigarettes in the style of Cubist collage, with overlapping colors, dark against light, with vertical and horizontal forms. In 1922, Davis became a member of the Modern Artists of America. As an established modern artist, he made his way into the circles of the New York avant-garde. Over the years, he befriended such abstract painters as Charles Demuth, Arshile Gorky, John D. Graham, and the poet William Carlos Williams.

In 1927 and 1928 he worked on the well-known Eggbeater Series, a personal exploration of Cubist form and space in which he used such objects as an eggbeater, an electric fan, and rubber gloves. The series appears as a kind of catharsis through which he attempted to rid his work of the last vestiges of illusionism. He painted the aforementioned props, which are elements of still life, repeatedly until they ceased to exist in his eyes and mind, except for the relationships between color, line, and shape. In these and some other works from the same period, he achieved a degree of simplified abstraction beyond anything he intended to create over the next ten years. He also established certain arrangement motifs in his paintings that he later developed in other works.

Trip to Paris

After a successful debut at the Valentine Gallery, his sponsor, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney encouraged him to go to Paris. Using her financial support, he traveled there with his friend, Bessie Chosak. In Paris, he set up a studio in the Montparnasse district. During his fourteen-month stay, he painted street landscapes using brilliant colors and typically French details such as balustrades, shutters, mansards, and cafes. In 1929 he married Bessie Chosak.

Return to the United States

In 1929, Davis returned to the United States. That same year, his mentor, Robert Henri, died. During the 1930s, America was gripped by the Great Depression. When in 1933 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt announced the launch of a federal program to support the arts, Davis was among the first to join. Between 1933 and 1939, he completed several murals under the Public Works of Art Program, the Federal Art Project, and the Works Progress Administration. With financial support from the government, he was able to continue his exploration of formalism and American themes. To promote the interests of artists and to protect them from war and fascism, he became a member of The Artists Union and the American Artists” Congress. In 1934 he was elected president of The Artists Union. From 1935 to 1936 he edited the magazine Art Front. However, he tried not to combine his social work with his artistic activity. In the 1930s, Davis”s major paintings showed a continuation of the interplay of clearly defined, fragmented objects with geometric-abstract structure. At the same time, the artist conducted numerous experiments with full abstraction, particularly in line drawings and paintings. His color became increasingly bright, and in many works he intensified the impression of pace, a sense of movement, cheerfulness, and rhythm through an increasing complication of smaller, more irregular, and contrasting colored forms. The early 1930s paintings featured orderly, clearly identifiable objects: a gas pump, buildings, furniture, hats, cars, and signs, placed in vibrant urban landscapes. In the works of the late 1930s, objects were dematerialized, transformed into forms with colorful outlines. This was the beginning of twenty-five years of mature abstract painting in the artist”s career. A certain exception to this was the large-scale (14 × 46 m) mural History of Communication from 1939, preserved only as a sketch, whose recognizable subject was probably determined by the circumstances of the commission.

Parallel to his painting activities, Davis was active as an educator: in 1932 he taught at the Art Students League of New York, in 1940 he became a lecturer at the New School for Social Research, and in 1950 at Yale University.

Davis painted extensively until his death. In numerous small paintings, in oil or gouache, he experimented with new ideas or revisited older motifs for possible variant developments, such as Combination Concrete II (1958) or The Paris Bit (1959), a nostalgic pastiche of Parisian reminiscences. He left several unfinished paintings and drawings in his studio that document his creative methods and the inexhaustible fertility of his imagination. He also left many notebooks with observations and records of his ideas for possible development. Davis is almost the only American painter of the 20th century whose work transcended all changes in style, movement, and fashion. Even in the 1950s, when Abstract Expressionism dominated the American scene, the artist continued to have respect and admiration for the most experimental new artists.

In his later years, Davis continued to find artistic success. In 1952 and 1954 he received, as a representative of the United States, honors at the Venice Biennale. In addition, he was awarded the International Solomon R. Guggenheim Award in 1958 and 1960. He died suddenly of a stroke, leaving behind an artistic legacy of paintings and a reputation as one of America”s first modernists. Art critic Brian O”Doherty described him in the pages of The New York Times as “one of the few great painters America has produced who was never anachronistic.”

Davis began his artistic career in the tradition of American realism, represented by the Robert Henri school. Later, he explored Post-Impressionist and Fauvist painting, and in the 1920s, European techniques in abstraction and synthetic cubism. These experiences culminated in the Eggbeater Series. It is Davis who is credited with developing the American variety of European Cubism. His paintings, through their use of distinctly American slang and symbolism, solidified the United States” position in the world of contemporary art. Davis was one of the first to treat jazz and swing together with painting. His use of bright, pulsing colors, expressive lines, and repetitive shapes gave a visual rhythm to his paintings, reminiscent of the syncopation and improvisation so characteristic of jazz music. Davis introduced a new, post-cubist approach to abstraction, scattering shapes across the canvas and manipulating bold colors in such a way as to reject the focal point that focuses the viewer”s attention. This new method, in which all parts of a painting are equal, conceived so that the viewer”s eye can wander undirected, marked an important step toward the total abstraction made by Abstract Expressionists such as Jackson Pollock. Davis”s transformation of consumer goods and advertisements into works of art, in turn, foreshadowed the pop art of the 1960s. Davis remains one of the most important American artists working in the interwar period.

Prace Stuarta Davisa znajdują się w zbiorach głównych amerykańskich muzeów sztuki, w tym: Addison Gallery of American Art, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Biblioteka Kongresu, Brooklyn Museum, Carnegie Museum of Art, Dallas Museum of Art, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Harvard University Art Museums, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Hyde Collection, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Memorial Art Gallery, Museum of Fine Arts w Bostonie, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Montclair Art Museum, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum of Modern Art, Muzeum Thyssen-Bornemisza, National Gallery of Australia, National Portrait Gallery, Norton Museum of Art, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Phillips Collection, Portland Museum of Art, Princeton University Art Museum, San Diego Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Renwick Gallery, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Walker Art Center, Whitney Museum of American Art.

Sources

  1. Stuart Davis
  2. Stuart Davis (painter)
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