
For the more than three hundred carved wooden figures, furniture pieces, and reliefs he created during his lifetime, Davis used shipyard lumber, pieces donated by his friends, or wood he bought at lumberyards. He almost never made preliminary drawings or models but reduced the mass with a hatchet (and, later, a band saw) before refining the form with a chisel and knives, many of which he fabricated himself. To add textural detail, he sometimes used tools of this barbering trade, such as the blade of his hair clippers. Davis's sculptures, which range in height from six to more than forty inches, can be divided into major categories: portraits of American and African leaders, religious images, patriotism, works influenced by African forms, fantasy, flora and fauna, love, humor, and abstract decorative objects. The exhibition includes the group regarded as the artist's masterwork: a series of carved busts of forty U.S. presidents. (source)
1 comment:
I saw this material in the late Carroll Greene's place in Savannah, and it is exceptional. Mr. Greene was a great man, and I hope his collection has been kept intact.
It can be seen at http://www.acaciacollection.com/
Jim Linderman
http://dulltooldimbulb.blogspot.com/
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