Stuart Davis has a sure claim to a place in the history of American art. As early as 1932, he was hailed as “the ace of American modernists” and there is scarcely a museum in the United States that ...
Purchase this and other timeless New Criterion essays in our hard-copy reprint series. At the same time, however, Davis felt a deep attachment to the subject matter of his art, and did not hesitate to ...
HMSG copy is a gift from the National Gallery of Art. NGA borrowed works from the Hirshhorn for this exhibition. "Hailed as a precursor of both pop art and contemporary abstraction, Stuart Davis ...
24.8 x 23.7 cm. (9.8 x 9.3 in.) Subscribe now to view details for this work, and gain access to over 18 million auction results. Purchase One-Day Pass ...
The exhibition that belatedly introduced Van Gogh, Cezanne, Matisse, Rouault, Braque and Picasso to the U.S. public—Manhattan’s Armory Show in 1913 —also inspired a young U.S. artist named Stuart ...
Stuart Davis, “Lucky Strike” (1921), oil on canvas, 33 1/4 x 18 inches, The Museum of Modern Art, New York; gift of the American Tobacco Company, Inc., 1951 (all ...
"Published to accompany the exhibition Swing Landscape : Stuart David and the Modernist Mural, organized by the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art, Indiana University, Bloomington. The exhibition, ...
ALEXIS ROCKMAN: OCEANUS Rockman has been portraying environmental calamity in his paintings for decades, often with a nightmarish, finely detailed dystopian aesthetic that might bring to mind ...
In both his life and his art, Stuart Davis is as American as bourbon on the rocks. A dumpy, bejowled man who talks with down-to-earth honesty in a good-natured nasal growl, Davis likes television, ...
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