Stuart Davis: In Full Swing

June 10–Sept 25, 2016


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The 1950s

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Davis's early paintings had often included words and phrases as product names and signage. In 1950, he began incorporating words into his art as independent design elements. Doing so allowed him to infuse his paintings with the bold energy and ebullience of advertising and popular culture without resorting to illusionistic realism. Sometimes the words he included referenced objects he observed in the world, as in Little Giant Still Life (1950), based on a matchbook cover advertising Champion spark plugs. In other paintings, the words refer to aesthetic concepts he was writing about in his journals. In neither case did he intend the words to be clues to a painting's meaning, which he insisted rested exclusively in the work's formal properties.

Davis's reliance on words as major design elements coincided with his introduction of a new vocabulary of expansive shapes whose increased scale heightened the impact of their color. By controlling the spatial properties of color to advance and recede, Davis ensured that the forms in his paintings visually moved forward and backward at equal speeds. The effect was of a fast-moving surface, perceived simultaneously as a single impression that seemed to push into the viewer's space with enormous force an impression one critic approvingly likened to a "good sock on the jaw."

Below is a selection of works from The 1950s.

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Semé, 1953

Stuart Davis (1892–1964), Semé, 1953. Oil on canvas, 52 x 40 in. (132 x 101.6 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art; George A. Hearn Fund, 1953. © Estate of Stuart Davis/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY

Semé forms a “family group” with Davis’s paintings Rapt at Rappaport’s (1951–52) and Landscape with Saw (1922), which hang nearby. In addition to its title—an art historical term used to describe a grouping of shapes that cannot be divided into smaller, independent parts—the work includes a number of words related to Davis’s attitude toward subject matter and composition. “Any” refers to Davis’s theory that any subject can be used to make art, and “eydeas” is a playful conflation of “eye” and “ideas,” implying the interconnection of both elements in the act of painting.



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in the Whitney's collection

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On the Hour

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Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

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