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Making
more with less was the driving idea behind the work of David E.
Davis. In the 1970s, using a deliberately restricted visual vocabulary
of triangles, circles and rectangleswhich he subdivided, combined,
and juxtaposed in a system he called the Harmonic Gridhe created
pieces that ranged from the monumental to the dynamic. Indeed, the
fluid rhythms achieved in many of his pieces evoked comparisons
with music.
The
artist's deep respect for orderly thought and critical analysis
can be
traced to his Rumanian childhood as the son of a noted Talmudic
scholar. For Davis, discipline and a logical structure were
always been essential to his art.
In
1934, with the shadow of Naziism spreading across Europe,
his family relocated to Cleveland. There David won
a full scholarship to the Cleveland School (now Cleveland
Institute) of Art just as war was breaking out in Europe,
only to have his studies interrupted by four years in the
U.S. Armed Forces. After the war
he attended the École des Beaux Arts in Paris and
the Cleveland Institute and went on to earn a master of
fine arts from Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
But
it was not until 1967after stints as vice president
for Cleveland-based American Greetings Corporation's Creative
Department and vice president of Electro General Plasticsthat
Davis set up a metal-working studio in a former gasoline
station so he could devote himself to sculpture full time.
Over the next three decades, his work would be featured
in more than 19 solo and numerous group exhibitions in venues
ranging from the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Butler
Institute of American Art to galleries and museums in Florida,
New York, Chicago, and Bucharest, Rumania.
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Sound
of Fourth of July
1997
Stainless steel
12'x4'x4' |
Davis
executed a number of major public commissions in Ohio and Florida,
and his work is represented in many museum collectionssuch
as those of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the John and Mable Ringling
Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Artas well as in significant
private and corporate collections.

Bridge
to Knowledge
1984
Aluminum, stainless steel, steel
12'x60'x9'
Beachwood
Branch, Cuyahoga County Public Library, Beachwood, Ohio
He
preferred to work in a series, defining a general theme around which
visual ideas were explored. The aesthetic qualities of a workform
and coloralong with the material itself (typically cast bronze
or fabricated metal elements carefully welded, polished, and painted)
were more interesting to him than content. Most comfortable working
in an abstract idiom, he sought to create timeless visual symbols
from a specific vocabulary of forms ranging from geometric to organic,
often combining the two. "My overall aim," he said, "is one of harmony,
peace, and beauty."
During
the 1970s, Davis pursued his Harmonic Grid Series and its almost limitless
possibilities. After winning the Cleveland Arts Prize in 1980, he
spent the next two decades exploring the tetrahedron, arch, and spiral.
As the geometric edge of his early work softened in the Arch Series,
he shifted from constructed pieces to carved pieces, and from metals
to wood and stone.
Davis
also had a deep commitment both to the advancement of his chosen
art form and to the preservation of the region's distinctive cultural
heritage. In 1990, he and his wife, Bernice Saperstein Davis, co-founded
the Sculpture Center, a resource and exhibition space, to nurture
promising area sculptors, and, in 1997, the Artist Archives of the
Western Reserve.
David
Davis died in November 2002. He was 82.
text by
Dennis Dooley
1986 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Fall 2002
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