NEW YORK, NY.- David Richard Gallery is showing Ronald Davis, Paintings: 1960s through 2010, an exhibition surveying the optically stimulating and perceptually challenging paintings spanning six decades of the artists career that were produced in his California and New Mexico studios. Davis explored many new and unconventional painting supports and media throughout his career, including acrylic on canvas; molded polyester resin and fiberglass; acrylic and dry pigment on canvas; Cel-Vinyl acrylic copolymer and Nova Gel on Birch plywood; encaustic wax and pigment on birch plywood; and acrylics on expanded PVC plastic.
This presentation includes 27 geometric, hard-edge, and color-based abstract paintings created from 1963 to 2010. They mostly have shaped perimeters with some rectangular canvases that in the aggregate map Daviss career-spanning investigations of illusory space and optical effects in the two-dimensional picture plane. His explorations began with the early 1960s paintings and series of minimalist Monochrome paintings from 1965; to his very well-known large scale, shaped, and molded resin paintings of slabs, dodecagons, and cubes (1966-1972); then to the perspectival Snapline (1975 1978) and geometric Floater (1978 1979) series, both acrylic paint on canvas; the Slabette series (1982 1985) and Ray Trace paintings (1982 1989); on to the Wax Series of encaustic paintings on wood (1996 1999); then on to the Hinge Series (2001 2002) and NuShape series (2002 2010); and finally, a return to the Shaped Paintings (2009 2010).
Fourteen of the artworks are installed and hung on the gallery walls and the rest included in the exhibition catalog with a detailed checklist. A digital exhibition catalog includes an essay by Dave Hickey from 2015, Ronald Davis is Not Doing What Youre Seeing (Courtesy of the Dave Hickey Estate).
Ronald Daviss Early Years Influences and Motivations
In the early 1960s, Davis was fresh out of his studies at the Art Institute of San Francisco, heavily influenced by Jackson Pollock, Clyfford Still and expressionism. However, faced with the monumental accomplishments of such giants of abstract modernism, he realized he had to find his own voice and visual language. Stating that he strove to expand the boundaries of painting, not the boundaries of what was then becoming art[1], he did so by jumping back into the history of early Renaissance painting, specifically Paolo Uccello and Duccio and their early reinvention of perspective illusion. By focusing on extreme vector geometry, potent color interactions per Johannes Itten, and optical effects, he found his way.
More specifically, Davis stated, I set up tensions in my paintings; between the flatness of the canvas and the illusion of the depicted abstract objects; between the painterly and the hard edge; between color and color; between light and shadow. These paintings attempt to probe the dimensions of time and space, while not existing in time at all, the whole artwork being viewable in an instant.[2] The combination of dualities and internal tensions within each painting resulted in imagery expanding (literally) and popping (figuratively) out of a traditional square or rectangular picture plane and into shaped perimeters that gave the illusion of rectangular boxes, pentagons, parallelograms, diamonds, and bent planks, each protruding off the wall. Such illusions became an easy leap to painting much larger, intensely optical imagery and leveraging three-point perspective in molded polyester resin, protruding canvases, encaustic on shaped wood supports, expanded PVC, and canvases in various shapes and sizes.
Regarding Daviss early rectangular and shaped acrylic paintings from 1963 to 1965 (not including the Monochrome Paintings), other than Dr. Zig Wig, 1964, which was exhibited at Stanford University in 1964, none of those paintings had ever been presented publicly until 2022 in Daviss solo exhibition, Optical, Shaped and Color Abstractions: Paintings 1963 1965, at David Richard Gallery in New York. In particular, the painting Hexagon Block, 1965, has a back label from the Nicholas Wilder Gallery in Los Angeles, where Davis was first represented and the year of his first solo show with Wilder. Hexagon Block, 1965 was discussed and image included in an essay written by Barbara Rose for the exhibition A New Aesthetic that she organized for the Washington Gallery of Modern Art in Washington D.C. in 1967.[3]
During those early years in the 1960s, Davis met lifelong friend and colleague, New York lyrical abstraction painter Ronnie Landfield, whose influence and encouragement have been vital to Daviss ongoing productivity. Even though Davis lived and worked in California among his Light And Space movement colleagues, he maintained substantive relationships with Landfield and other New York painters and intellectuals such as Kenneth Noland, Frank Stella, Clement Greenberg, and Barbara Rose, all of whom inspired Daviss artistic explorations, meditations, and intellectual exchanges, even if sometimes from afar.
Ronald Daviss Artworks and Career
Ronald Davis, a multidisciplinary artist always inspired by visual arts and music, has explored theories of abstraction during his 7-decade career through: painting on canvas, pigment imbedded in polyester resin, on expanded PVC, wood, and paper as well as drawing, sculpture, three-dimensional computer modeling, digital painting, and electronic music and sound sculpture. His visual compositions have consistently utilized geometry and hard-edge painting combined with intense color interactions, chromatic relationships and extreme vanishing point perspective to create internal tensions on supports that are bound within the two-dimensional picture plane, while the imagery painted on the surface suggests three-dimensional space that creates compelling optical effects and the illusion of literal objects rather than a picture of an object.
Influenced early on by: Abstract Expressionist painters Jackson Pollock, Clyfford Still, and Barnett Newman; gestural color painters Morris Louis and Sam Francis; as well as Frank Lobdell, Jack Jefferson, Fred Martin, Richard Diebenkorn, and Elmer Bischoff while studying painting at the San Francisco Art Institute from 1960 to 1964. During this time, Davis was finding his unique approach and aesthetic. He did not want to follow in the footsteps of the AbEx masters who influenced him, and not certain he could expand upon their prevailing expressionistic style of the time, nor paint mans physical limitations.[1] However, Davis stated that he discovered [he] could paint a stripe. And later, checker-boards. Abstract geometric objects. He further stated that his strategy became to do a Mondrian in the style of Jackson Pollock, and a Pollock in the style of Mondrian, and that his instructor, Frank Lobdell, emphasized the importance of what you leave out of a painting, not what you put in.[1] All together, the perfect storm was brewing within Davis, pushing him toward hard edge, geometric painting that helped him see how to push the edge of the pictorial space out of the conventional and into new materials and dimensions, literally with shaped perimeters and molded resin infused with pigment.
In 1964 Davis moved to Los Angeles and had his first solo exhibition with the Nicholas Wilder Gallery in 1965. He had his first solo show in New York at Tibor de Nagy Gallery in 1966 followed by a solo show at Leo Castelli in 1968. During this seminal period, his painting practice migrated to the large, molded resin and fiberglass paintings produced from 1966 through 1972, with their extreme perspectival geometry that had flat surfaces while the interior confines of the geometric shapes were painted in a very gestural and expressionistic style, yet the paintings read as a three-dimensional object. In 1967 Michael Fried wrote in ARTFORUM that Daviss paintings were at the forefront of his generation. In at least two respects Davis work is characteristically Californian: it makes impressive use of new materials specifically, plastic backed with fiberglass and it exploits an untrammeled illusionism.[2] And further, Davis new work achieves an unequivocal identity as painting.[2]
Davis was included in the exhibition A New Aesthetic at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art in 1967, organized by Barbara Rose who wrote in the catalog that, Ron Davis is the single artist in this exhibition who has appropriated the new materials toward the end of painting.[3] Rose further stated that Daviss use of a complex pictorial illusionism relates them to the tradition of easel painting, rather than to the new literalist objects.[3] Several of Daviss contemporaries, Larry Bell, DeWain Valentine, Peter Alexander and John McCracken, were also exploring the new acrylic plastics that were developed and used industrially for auto bodies, surf boards and in the aerospace industry, but in very different ways than Davis, each producing literal shapes of a uniform translucent color as part of the Light and Space movement and other aesthetic purposes.
The 1960s and 70s were a productive, creative time for Davis and his new shaped, cast polyester resin paintings were in high demand. His paintings were acquired by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Tate Gallery, London, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Chicago Art Institute in 1968. Davis was a National Endowment for the Arts grantee in 1968 and his paintings included in international exhibitions: Documenta International, Ausstellung, Kasel, Germany, 1968 and U. S. A., XXXVI International Biennial Exhibition of Art, Venice, Italy, 1972.[4]
Davis moved to Malibu, California in 1972 where he designed a new studio and home with architect Frank Gehry. He spent a year learning silkscreening, lithography, etching, and papermaking from Ken Tyler at Gemini, G.E.L. and Tyler Graphics, Bedford, New York. Returning to painting on canvas in 1973, Davis continued pushing the edges of illusionism in the pictorial space by expanding his use of new supports and media while further leveraging geometry, perspective, color relationships and optical effects. The well-known series included: the large scale Snapline Series in 1975-78; Floater Series, 1978-79; Flatland Series, 1980-81; Object Paintings, 1982; Music Series, a segue from geometry and back to expressionist paintings, in 1983-85, which becomes an important point and aspect in Daviss career; Freeway and Freeline Series, 1987; and Spiral Series, 1988.[4] Davis also began using the Macintosh computer and many new programs and software for rendering, modeling, and researching three-dimensional space.
In 1993 Davis moved his home and studio to a compound of buildings based on the Navajo Hogan designed in collaboration with architect Dennis Holloway and anthropologist Charley Cambridge. Returning to painting in 1995 and continuing with his interest in shaped supports, he produced a series of paintings with encaustic (wax) that straddled the pictorial space and objecthood. No surprise that he also became more fascinated with three-dimensional computer modeling, painting, and printing.
A significant breakthrough occurred in 2002 with Davis producing a large new series of paintings of acrylic medium on expanded PVC for the supports. This led to multiple exhibitions of the new paintings, additional museum acquisitions, and a retrospective exhibition, Ronald Davis: Forty Years of Abstraction, 1962 - 2002, at the Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio in 2002 that included forty paintings, sculptures, and prints spanning four-decade. Davis continued his work with computers, 3-D modeling, and printing, collaborating with fabricators and producing highly illusionistic imagery on metal supports.
Davis was included in the exhibition Pacific Standard Time: Crossroads in LA Painting and Sculpture, at the J. Paul Getty Museum in association with the Getty Research Foundation in Los Angeles in 2011. He had numerous survey presentations and exhibitions of his many significant bodies of historic and newly created artworks throughout the 2000s. He continues to explore computers for his love of three-dimensional space and adapting new technologies and has returned to painting again in 2021, producing a new series for an upcoming solo exhibition.
The newest series of paintings from 2021 and 2022 are mentioned specifically, as well as the other times in 1973 and 1995 when Davis retuned to painting on more conventional supports and/or media, because painting has been at the center of his career and accounts for most of his artistic production. His forays into new materials and processes come out of his intense interest in new possibilities and ways to present optical effects and illusory imagery in paintings. Sometimes the new materials and near-literalness of those explorations go beyond the usual perceptual blurring of two-dimensional and three-dimensional space. In 1967, Barbara Rose noted this difference between illusion and literalism in Daviss early works. In 2002, Davis said, This struggle between object and the pictorial remains central to my work after forty years.[1] The struggle has continued through 2022 after sixty years of making art.
The "Music Series" from 1983-85 is worth noting again. It is a stunning series of paintings that may seem like an aesthetic departure for Davis. However, Davis has used painterly, gestural mark making and splatters to create the interiors of his geometric shapes as well as the grounds in many series, including: cast polyester resin paintings, 1966-1972; Snapline Series, Object Series and Splatter Paintings. Addressing this binary as perceived by some viewers, Davis stated emphatically in 2002, Constitutionally, I remain a geometrician and an expressionist[5]
Davis has asked the Gallery to dedicate this exhibition to the late art critic and writer Dave Hickey. Says Davis: Shortly before his passing, Hickey penned an essay entitled Ronald Davis Is Not Doing What Youre Seeing. Despite our short but valued friendship, Hickey delivered some striking insights and helped define my relevance. In particular, he described how I did things backwards and upside down. I recommend reading Hickeys short essay, linked here.[6]
David Richard Gallery
Ronald Davis, Paintings: 1960s through 2010
October 17th, 2023 - November 17th, 2023