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Gene Davis papers

Creator:
Davis, Gene, 1920-1985  Search this
Names:
White House (Washington, D.C.)  Search this
Baro, Gene  Search this
Colby, Carl  Search this
Davis, Douglas  Search this
Davis, Florence  Search this
Greenberg, Clement, 1909-1994  Search this
McGowin, Ed, 1938-  Search this
Naifeh, Steven, 1952-  Search this
Nordland, Gerald  Search this
North, Percy, 1945-  Search this
Seitz, William C. (William Chapin)  Search this
Thomas, Alma  Search this
Wall, Donald  Search this
Extent:
17.7 Linear feet
Type:
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Sound recordings
Transcripts
Photographs
Interviews
Video recordings
Date:
1920-2000
bulk 1942-1990
Summary:
The papers of the artist Gene Davis measure 17.7 linear feet and date from 1920-2000, with the bulk of materials dating from 1942-1990. Papers document Davis's personal life and his career as an artist and educator, as well as his career as a journalist in the 1940s and 1950s, through biographical materials, correspondence, interviews, business records, estate records, writings by and about Gene Davis, printed materials concerning Davis's art career, personal and art-related photographs, and artwork by Davis and others.
Scope and Contents:
The papers of the artist Gene Davis measure 17.7 linear feet and date from 1920-2000, with the bulk of materials dating from 1942-1990. Papers document Davis's personal life and his career as an artist and educator, and to a lesser degree his early career as a journalist in the 1940s and 1950s, through biographical materials, correspondence, interviews, business records, estate records, writings by and about Gene Davis, printed materials concerning Davis's art career, personal and art-related photographs, and artwork by Davis and others.

Biographical materials include birth and death certificates, awards, biographical narratives by Gene Davis and others, CVs, résumés, personal documents from Davis's family and childhood, documents related to his work as a White House correspondent, documentation related to his death and memorial service, and papers for the family pets. A video documentary about Davis by Carl Colby is found on one videocassette.

Correspondence is mainly of a professional nature, and correspondents include gallery and museum curators, private art collectors, publishers, fellow artists, art educators, academics, and students. Letters document exhibitions, sales, book projects, teaching jobs, visits to studios, local art community events in the Washington, D.C. area, and other projects. Significant correspondents include Gene Baro, Douglas Davis, Clement Greenberg, Gerald Nordland, William Seitz, Alma Thomas, and Donald Wall. Interviews and lectures include sound recordings and transcripts. Many of the interviews were broadcast or published. Also found is a single lecture by Davis given in 1969 at the National Collection of Fine Arts, Smithsonian Institution, entitled "Contemporary Painting." Sound recordings are found for three of the interviews and for the lecture, on 4 sound reels and 1 sound cassette.

Business records include artwork documentation, price lists, sales records, contracts, financial and legal records, gallery and museum files documenting sales and exhibitions, records related to the construction of Davis's home studio in 1970, and a few teaching records. Estate records mainly reflect Florence Davis's efforts to document the works of her husband, and to manage their exhibition, promotion, and sale after his death in April 1985. Estate records include an inventory of artworks, documentation of gifts to museums, correspondence, legal, and financial records. Writings include notes, drafts of essays, artist statements, and articles by Davis, and many articles by others about Davis. Several of Davis's articles reflect specifically on the Washington, D.C. art scene. Also found are drafts of monographs on Davis including one by Donald Wall (1975) and one by Steven Naifeh (1982). Records of Naifeh's book also include photographs of all black and white and color plates from the published book. Among the writings are also notes and research files of Percy North, who worked on an update to Naifeh's 1982 bibliography after Davis's death.

Printed materials include annual reports of museums, published arts-related calendars, auction catalogs, brochures from organizations with which Davis had some affiliation, exhibition announcements and invitations, exhibition catalogs, magazine articles, newspaper clippings, newsletters, posters, press releases, and other published material. Photographs include personal photographs of Gene and Florence Davis and their families, portraits of Gene Davis, photographs of Gene Davis with artworks and working in the studio, Davis' art classes and students, installations of site-specific works, conceptual and video works, exhibition openings, and photographs of artwork, both installed in exhibitions and individually photographed. Found among the photographs are also four videocassettes documenting the Gene Davis retrospective as installed at the Smithsonian National Museum of American Art in 1987.

Artwork includes photographs, drawings, moving images, and documentation of conceptual art. Works by Davis include documentation of the 1969 "Giveaway" with Douglas Davis and Ed McGowin, "The Artist's Fingerprints Except for One which belongs to someone else," documentation of his "Air Displacement" happening, a short film entitled "Patricia," and a video entitled "Video Puzzle." Other moving images include four reels of film of Davis's stripe paintings, and other experiments with motion picture film and photographs.
Arrangement:
The collection is arranged as 8 series.

Missing Title

Series 1: Biographical Material, 1930-1987 (0.6 linear feet; Boxes 1, 17)

Series 2: Correspondence, 1943-1990 (1.7 linear feet; Boxes 1-3)

Series 3: Interviews and Lectures, 1964-1983 (0.3 linear feet; Box 3)

Series 4: Business and Estate Records, 1942-1990 (1.6 linear feet; Boxes 3-5, 17, OV 20)

Series 5: Writings, 1944-1990 (2 linear feet; Boxes 5-6, 17, OV 19)

Series 6: Printed Material, 1942-1990 (5.5 linear feet; Boxes 7-11, 17-18, OV 20, FC 35-37)

Series 7: Photographs, 1920-2000 (3.8 linear feet; Boxes 11-15, 17, OV 19)

Series 8: Artwork, 1930-1985 (2.2 linear feet; Boxes 15-16, 18, FC 21-34)
Biographical / Historical:
Gene Davis (1920-1985) was a Washington, D.C.-based artist and educator who worked in a variety of media, including painting, drawing, collage, video, light sculpture, and conceptual art. Davis is best known for his vertical stripe paintings and his association with the Washington Color School.

Davis was born in 1920 in Washington, D.C. and began his career as a writer. In his twenties he wrote pulp stories and worked as a journalist, reporting for United Press International and serving as a White House correspondent for Transradio Press Service during the Truman administration. Later, he worked in public relations for the Automobile Association of America. A self-taught artist, Davis began painting while still working full-time as a writer, influenced by the prevailing abstract expressionist artists of the time, his frequent visits to the Corcoran Gallery and Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., and by his friend and mentor, Jacob Kainen. His first one-man show was held in the lobby of the Dupont Theater in Washington in 1952. He had a drawing accepted in the Corcoran Area Show in 1953, and won several local art prizes in the 1950s. He began showing work regularly in galleries around Washington, such as the Watkins Gallery at American University, the Gres Gallery, and the Henri Gallery, and had solo exhibitions at Jefferson Place Gallery in 1959 and 1961. Many of the painters who made up what became known as the Washington Color School also showed there, including Kenneth Noland, Howard Mehring, and Sam Gilliam. In 1965, the Washington Gallery of Modern Art held a seminal exhibition entitled Washington Color Painters, which included Davis, Noland, Mehring, Morris Louis, Thomas Downing, and Paul Reed.

Davis began showing outside of Washington regularly in the 1960s, including the Poindexter and Fischbach galleries in New York City, and in several important group shows at museums such as the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He had three works shown in the 1964 exhibition Post-Painterly Abstraction, organized by the influential art critic Clement Greenberg at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In the late 1960s, he began teaching art classes at the Corcoran School, and spent the summer of 1969 as artist in residence at Skidmore College's "Summer in Experiment" program.

Davis experimented with form continuously throughout his career, including a period of conceptual work in the late 1960s. In 1969 he participated in the "Giveaway," organized by Douglas Davis and Ed McGowin, in which multiple copies of a Davis painting were given away to invited guests in a gesture intended to subvert the art market. Davis also began experimenting with scale, creating a series of tiny paintings he called "Micro-paintings," which were exhibited at Fischbach Gallery in 1968. Around this time he also began working with film and video, recruiting models from his art classes to enact tightly choreographed movement pieces that played with rhythm and interval. Convinced by a lawyer that his videos were a liability without having obtained releases from the models, Davis destroyed all but one of his video works. The surviving video, "Video Puzzle," shows a foreshortened view of a model on the floor of a gallery spelling out a statement by Clement Greenberg at predetermined intervals.

Davis made several large-scale site-specific works using the stripe motif in public places. The first of these was created in the Bal Harbour, Florida, Neiman Marcus department store in 1970. Later works included Franklin's Footpath, executed in the road leading to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1972, and Niagara (1979) at ArtPark in Lewistown, NY, promoted at the time as the largest painting in the world. Interior large-scale works were created twice at the Corcoran Gallery, with Magic Circle (1975) and Ferris Wheel (1982), both executed in the museum's rotunda. Black Yo-Yo was created for the Cranbrook Academy in 1980, and Sun Sonata (1983), an illuminated wall of colored liquid-filled tubes, was created as an architectural feature of the Muscarelle Museum of Art in Williamsburg, Virginia. Plans for an unexecuted work called "Grass Painting," for a site near the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., were exhibited in the 1974 "Art Now" festival.

In the late 1970s and 1980s Davis consistently exhibited his work in several solo gallery shows a year, and also had numerous solo exhibitions in major museums. A major exhibition, Recent Paintings, was organized by the Walker Art Center in 1978, and traveled to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in 1979. A drawing retrospective was held at the Brooklyn Museum of art in 1983, and the same year the Washington Project for the Arts organized an exhibition entitled Child and Man: A Collaboration, featuring drawings Davis made in response to childrens' drawings. Davis died suddenly in April 1985 at the age of 65, and a major retrospective of his work was held at the Smithsonian National Museum of American Art in 1987.
Related Materials:
Also found in the Archives of American Art is an oral history interview with Gene Davis conducted by Estill Curtis Pennington on April 23, 1981. A transcript is available on the Archives of American Art website.
Provenance:
Donated 1981 by Gene Davis and 1986 by his wife, Florence. Additional material donated 1991 and 1993 from Smithsonian American Art Museum via a bequest to them from the Gene and Florence Davis estate. Much of the 1993 addition was assembled by art historian Percy North at the request of Florence Davis. An additional folder of photographs of Davis taken in 1969 but printed in 2000 was later added to the collection.
Restrictions:
Use of original papers requires an appointment and is limited to the Archives' Washington, D.C. Research Center. Use of archival audiovisual recordings with no duplicate access copy requires advance notice. Contact Reference Services for more information.
Rights:
The Archives of American Art makes its archival collections available for non-commercial, educational and personal use unless restricted by copyright and/or donor restrictions, including but not limited to access and publication restrictions. AAA makes no representations concerning such rights and restrictions and it is the user's responsibility to determine whether rights or restrictions exist and to obtain any necessary permission to access, use, reproduce and publish the collections. Please refer to the Smithsonian's Terms of Use for additional information.
Occupation:
Reporters and reporting -- Washington (D.C.)  Search this
Video artists -- Washington, D.C.  Search this
Conceptual artists -- Washington, D.C  Search this
Painters -- Washington (D.C.)  Search this
Collagists -- Washington (D.C.)  Search this
Topic:
Color-field painting  Search this
Art -- Study and teaching  Search this
Artists' studios -- Photographs  Search this
Genre/Form:
Sound recordings
Transcripts
Photographs
Interviews
Video recordings
Citation:
Gene Davis papers, 1920-2000, bulk 1942-1990. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
Identifier:
AAA.davigene
See more items in:
Gene Davis papers
Archival Repository:
Archives of American Art
GUID:
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/mw90a230f67-650f-483a-acdf-50b6ca91fe59
EDAN-URL:
ead_collection:sova-aaa-davigene
Online Media:

Letters to Percy North

Creator:
North, Percy, 1945-  Search this
Names:
Daugherty, James Henry, 1889-1974  Search this
Weber, Max, 1881-1961  Search this
Extent:
0.2 Linear feet
Type:
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Date:
1951-1992
bulk 1977-1979
Scope and Contents:
53 Letters to Percy North from friends, family and associates and colleagues. Eleven letters from James Daugherty, April-Dec. 1971, and April 1973, concerning a proposed article by North about his pastels and color theories, the sale of a pastel to North, and his exhibitions; letters from Jack Levine, Kate Steinitz, Abraham Rattner, Edward Laning, and Hunter Ingalls responding to North's request for information about Max Weber; a letter from Norman Rockwell responding to a request for an autographed bookplate, March 2, 1971; a letter from Jerry Ott about the price of a print and the "strange twists and turns" of his career, July 8, 1992; letters from artists in response to North's request for information about works in the permanent collection of the University of Minnesota Art Gallery; letters from Herman Maril and Robert Luck concerning North's exhibition Hudson D. Walker: Patron and Friend at the University of Minnesota Art Gallery, 1977; a Christmas card from Renee and Chaim Gross, ca. 1951; illustrated note from Lila Katzen, 1986 and miscellany.
Biographical / Historical:
Art historian; Washington, DC North's dissertation was on painter Max Weber. Was guest curator at the University of Minnesota Art Gallery in the late 1970s.
Provenance:
Donated 1993 and 2004 by Percy North.
Restrictions:
Use of original papers requires an appointment and is limited to the Archives' Washington, D.C., Research Center. Contact Reference Services for more information.
Occupation:
Artists -- United States  Search this
Art historians  Search this
Identifier:
AAA.nortperc
Archival Repository:
Archives of American Art
GUID:
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/mw9fdf6250d-96e9-483a-9375-c293ef0b31c7
EDAN-URL:
ead_collection:sova-aaa-nortperc

Letters to Percy North, 1951-1992, bulk 1977-1979

Creator:
North, Percy, 1945-  Search this
Subject:
Daugherty, James Henry  Search this
Weber, Max  Search this
Citation:
Letters to Percy North, 1951-1992, bulk 1977-1979. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
Theme:
Research and writing about art  Search this
Record number:
(DSI-AAA_CollID)6498
(DSI-AAA_SIRISBib)215709
AAA_collcode_nortperc
Theme:
Research and writing about art
Data Source:
Archives of American Art
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:AAADCD_coll_215709

Abstractions from the Phillips Collection : part I, August 24, 1983-March 12, 1984 : part II, October 14-November 15, 1983, Fenwick Library Gallery, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia / Percy North

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Phillips Collection  Search this
George Mason University Libraries  Search this
Subject:
Gilliam, Sam 1933-  Search this
Davis, Gene 1920- Exhibitions  Search this
Phillips Collection  Search this
Physical description:
[14] p. : ill. ; 28 cm
Type:
Exhibitions
Place:
United States
Washington (D.C.)
Date:
1983
C1983
20th century
Topic:
Art, Abstract  Search this
Art, American  Search this
Painters--Interviews  Search this
Call number:
N6512.5.A2 N86 1983
N6512.5.A2N86 1983
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_379014

Visions of an inner life : abstractions by Will Henry Stevens / Percy North

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Stevens, Will Henry 1881-1949  Search this
Emory University Museum of Art and Archaeology  Search this
Subject:
Stevens, Will Henry 1881-1949  Search this
Physical description:
19 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 23 cm
Type:
Exhibitions
Place:
United States
Date:
1988
[c1988]
Topic:
Art, Abstract  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_713316

Bernhard Gutmann : an American impressionist, 1869-1936 / by Percy North ; preface by William H. Gerdts

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Subject:
Gutmann, Bernhard 1869-1936 Criticism and interpretation  Search this
Physical description:
199 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm
Type:
Books
Date:
1995
C1995
Call number:
N40.1.G9865 N8 1995
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_490688

Max Weber, American modern / by Percy North

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Jewish Museum (New York, N.Y.)  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Physical description:
120 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 21 x 23 cm
Type:
Books
Exhibitions
Date:
1982
C1982
Call number:
N40.1.W37 N79 1982
N40.1.W37N79 1982
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_408137

Max Weber; the early paintings (1905-1920). By Phylis Burkley North

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Physical description:
xix, 270 leaves. illus. 28 cm
Type:
Books
Date:
1975
Call number:
N40.1.W37 N8
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_46636

Max Weber : Max Weber's women : [exhibition] February 6-March 9, 1996, Forum Gallery, New York

Title:
Max Weber's women
Author:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Forum Gallery (New York, N.Y.)  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Physical description:
40 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm
Type:
Exhibitions
Date:
1996
Topic:
Women in art  Search this
Call number:
N40.1.W37 F7w 1996
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_500560

Max Weber : the cubist decade, 1910-1920 / essay by Percy North ; introduction by Susan Krane

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Krane, Susan  Search this
High Museum of Art  Search this
Corcoran Gallery of Art  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Physical description:
110 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 26 cm
Type:
Books
Exhibitions
Date:
1991
Call number:
N40.1.W37 N79m 1991
N40.1.W37N79m 1991
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_425995

Max Weber : discoveries : January 14-February 20, 1999

Title:
Discoveries
Author:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Forum Gallery (New York, N.Y.)  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Physical description:
[32] p. : col. ill., port. ; 28 cm
Type:
Books
Exhibitions
Date:
1999
Call number:
ND237.W37 A4 1999
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_789430

Max Weber : bringing Paris to New York / essay by Percy North

Title:
Bringing Paris to New York
Author:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Baltimore Museum of Art  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Cézanne, Paul 1839-1906  Search this
Matisse, Henri 1869-1954  Search this
Picasso, Pablo 1881-1973  Search this
Rousseau, Henri 1844-1910  Search this
Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de 1864-1901  Search this
Physical description:
34 p. : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 26 cm
Type:
Books
Exhibitions
Date:
2013
C2013
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1001747

Models & muses : Max Weber and the figure / forward [sic] by Randall Suffolk ; essays by Catherine Whitney, Percy North ; curated by Catherine Whitney

Title:
Models and muses : Max Weber and the figure
Max Weber and the figure
Author:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Suffolk, Randall  Search this
Whitney, Catherine L  Search this
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Philbrook Museum of Art  Search this
Subject:
Weber, Max 1881-1961  Search this
Physical description:
140 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), ports. ; 28 cm
Type:
Exhibitions
Date:
2012
C2012
Topic:
Human beings in art  Search this
Women in art  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_995380

Bernhard Gutmann : face to face : [exhibition] May 6 through July 11, 1997

Title:
Face to face
Author:
Gutmann, Bernhard 1869-1936  Search this
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Beacon Hill Fine Art (Gallery)  Search this
Subject:
Gutmann, Bernhard 1869-1936 Exhibitions  Search this
Physical description:
27 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 27 cm
Type:
Books
Date:
1997
C1997
Call number:
N40.1.G9865 B4 1997
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_517227

Into the melting pot : the immigration of American modernism (1909-1929)

Author:
North, Percy 1945-  Search this
Joseph and Margaret Muscarelle Museum of Art  Search this
Physical description:
87 p. : ill. ; 28 cm
Type:
Exhibitions
Place:
United States
Date:
1984
20th century
Topic:
Modernism (Art)  Search this
Painting, American  Search this
Immigrants in art  Search this
Expatriate artists  Search this
Emigration and immigration  Search this
Call number:
ND212 .N855 1984
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_285793

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