Ronald Davis (b. 1937)
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT WEST COAST COLLECTION
Ronald Davis (b. 1937)

Untitled

Details
Ronald Davis (b. 1937)
Untitled
pigment and resin
52 x 137 x 2 in. (132 x 347.9 x 5 cm.)
Executed in 1967.
Provenance
Nicholas Wilder Gallery, Los Angeles
Exhibited
Vancouver Art Gallery, Los Angeles Six, 1968.
Seattle Art Museum, 1969
Pullman, Washington State University Fine Art Gallery, 1970
Denver Art Museum, 1975

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Saara Pritchard
Saara Pritchard

Lot Essay

"Davis saw a way to use Duchamp's perspective studies and transparent plane in The Large Glass for pictorial purposes. Instead of glass, he used fiberglass to create a surface that was equally transparent and detached from any illusion of reality. Because his colored pigments are mixed into a fluid resin and harden quickly, multiple layers of color may be applied without becoming muddy. His is essentially an inversion of Old Master layering and glazing except that color is applied behind rather than on top of the surface. Alone among his contemporaries, Ronald Davis was equally concerned with traditional problems of painting: space, scale, detail, color relationships and illusions as he was with the California emphasis on hi-tech craft and industrial materials. How to reconcile the literal object produced with the latest technology with transcendental metaphor became the problem that occupied throughout the Sixties."

Barbara Rose, 1988

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