Noah Davis shows new work in
FUG
431 E 6th Street
New York
Until April 26.
Flowers for Dubois, 2012.
About:
Untitled, 2015.
Creating psychological figurative paintings based on vintage photographs, art historical references, and his vivid imagination, Noah Davis (1983) explores the sadness and uncertainty of everyday life and African American history. Recalling work by Peter Doig, Marlene Dumas, and Neo Rauch, Davis’s paintings are nostalgic and sentimental yet, at the same time, grotesque and disturbing. They combine casual, gestural brushwork with surrealist or uncanny imagery, such as a masked girl sitting on a bed, a child being spanked, or two hunters carving up an elephant.
The Missing Link, 2013.
In 2010 Davis created a series of large-scale paintings based on Richard Brautigan’s 1968 novella, In Watermelon Sugar, about a post-apocalyptic commune. “Painting does something to your soul that nothing else can,” Davis explains. “It’s visceral and immediate and is always readdressed in new ways that keep it relevant.”
The Missing Link, 2013.
The Year of Conwain, 2009.
Courtesy: Jack Tilton, New York