Stuart Davis 1892-1964
18.7 x 28.9 cm
Framed dimensions: 18 x 21 1/2 in
Stuart Davis was born in 1892 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to a family of artists–– his parents had both received their education and met each other at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. At the time of Davis’s birth, his mother was a practicing sculptor, and his father was the art editor for a Philadelphia publication, the Philadelphia Press. Consequently, Davis grew up in a household that was accepting, even encouraging, of a pathway in the arts, an attitude opposite to the widespread societal opinions on art which viewed it, as a profession, as un-masculine and distinctly European.
Davis’s personal entry into the art world saw him studying under Robert Henri at his eponymous school of art, at which Davis received an unconventional education typical of Henri’s style and genre of painting. Davis, at first, formed part of a ‘second generation’ of Ashcan school painters. In his early ventures into painting, Davis’s art mirrored the urban subject matters and styles of his compatriots in the Ashcan school. Davis was particularly influenced by his good friend John Sloan, whose brushstrokes and figures are reflected in Davis’s early work. And already, in providing illustrations for the magazine ‘Masses,’ Davis proved himself to be a socially conscious man who infused his artwork with his values. However, the trajectory of Davis’s art was changed suddenly and permanently by that famous event which acquainted Americans with the work of European modernists at a scale never seen before, the 1913 Armory Show.
For Davis, the Armory Show was truly pivotal; he cited it in his meticulously kept journals and records as the catalyst for his transformation into the modernist he is remembered as today. Davis stated that the show provided him with “a wealth of new possibilities” and he spent the subsequent decade, a highly formative one full of exploration, delving into the world of modernism and honing his craft. Eventually, Davis would craft a “homegrown, personal brand of American cubism,” though in order to reach a style entirely his own, Davis first cycled through iterations of modernism inspired and influenced by the artists whose work he had seen at the Armory, particularly Matisse, Van Gogh, and Gaugin. Perhaps, Davis’s success in inventing such an original style, bold and adventurous and exciting, can be traced to his status as the “only painter of his generation to penetrate the surface of the style and seek its underlying logic,” as put by Diane Kelder in Stuart Davis: American Painter.
Theory was indeed enmeshed in Davis’s work–– theory as unique and varied as his paintings. Though Davis recognized his work as abstract, he did not see it as simply the abstraction of reality; rather, he saw himself as the creator of a new reality. In the late 20s, Davis also adopted what he called the ‘color-space logic,’ in which he formed his subjects and their relationships in terms of “subtly nuanced” color planes. Such “pictures that tend towards singleness” or are “pared down to eloquent essentials” are often Davis’s strongest, fitting with his meticulous nature (Stuart Davis).
One such painting is Show Boat, ca. 1929. Show Boat was painted in Gloucester, Massachusetts at a time that proved to be the calm before the storm for both Davis and the United States as a whole. Davis had just returned from a trip to Paris, just gotten married. However, the stock-market crash loomed on the horizon, as did the premature death of his wife. Economic and personal struggles would bring Davis to the forefront of the movement for social reform as an activist for artist’s rights as well as an avid proponent for the Works Progress Administration Federal Art Project. Show Boat reflects the more carefree months prior to the economic disaster of the coming fall.
Gloucester was the Davis family’s place of refuge in the summers, a place where Davis produced a good amount of work throughout his career. Though surrounded by sea and sky, Davis’s paintings from Gloucester are rarely scenes of pure nature. Still possessing roots in his Ashcan training, Davis’s scenes tend to depict the sights of humanity’s mark on the natural world: docks, gas stations, and boats.
The title Show Boat could refer to several things, following Davis’s penchant for creative names (ITLKSEZ, Rapt at Rappaport’s, etc.). Most simply, a show boat is a boat which holds performances for entertainment. It could also signal a showoff, or even a popular musical from two years before, also titled Show Boat, which tells the story of dock workers and show boat performers.
Davis was resistant of depicting things if only to replicate how they appear to the eye, and in Show Boat, the broad brick blocks of green and red prevent this, playing into his color-space logic. Like the title, they could also almost be several things: pillars, walls, or doors; attached or free-standing. Though the image is visually easy to digest, it is also complex in its perspective, limited color palette, and rendering of sand and sky.
A similar work from 1930, Boats, uses the same technique of juxtaposing planes of color with a largely neutral and straight-forward background. In both paintings, the dominating straight lines and uncolored outlines create the barest sense of spatial relations, leaving the viewer to follow the paths and form their own conclusions. Also shared between Boats and Show Boat is the whittling down of forms into their essential aspects that characterizes Davis’s greatest pictures.
A deceptively easy to parse painting, Stuart Davis’s Show Boat grabs hold of one’s attention via bold colors and original composition. Whether the viewer is familiar with Davis’s theories or not, Show Boat is sure to captivate and excite.
Provenance
The artist; (?);Rosalie Berkowitz;
Gladys and Selig S. Burrows, New York, 1959;
to Kenneth Burrows and Erica Jong, New York, 1997, by descent
Exhibitions
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Eighth Exhibition of Watercolors and Pastels, Nov. 6-Dec. 7, 1930 (Installation photograph).The Art Institute of Chicago, 11th International Watercolor Exhibition, Apr, 30-May 31, 1931 (checklist), 305.
AFA 1931 (11).
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