SAATCHI GALLERY
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SELECTED WORKS BY Gerald Davis



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Gerald Davis

For Hillary

2006
Oil on canvas

165.1 x 213.4cm each

Themes of sexuality, longing and lost innocence run throughout Gerald Davis’s work. Salvaging from his own personal experiences, Davis’s paintings often capture the turbulence of youth, championing all its awkwardness, embarrassment and sentimentality. Executed with the chastity of cartoon illustration, Davis’s fairytale images are cringe-worthy disclosures of preteen puppy-love, weaving shame and humiliation into Freudian celebrations of identity and acceptance. For Hillary is presented as a dyptich. One panel tells Davis’s true 7th grade tale of primping for a (never received) hand-job for which he devised an ill-crafted mirken; the other canvas is a representation of the desire and fear the girl inspired in him.


Gerald Davis

Boy-fight

2004
acrylic on canvas

174 x 126 cm

Gerald Davis adopts cartooning as the most logical tool for expression. His images capitalise on exaggerated gesture to convey magnified emotion. Davis’s monochrome palette is used as an atmospheric device, forcing the viewer to visually and emotionally adjust to the image space. In Boy-fight, Davis portrays the relationship dynamic he had with a childhood frenemy. Rendered in hazy tones, his canvas hovers between youthful innocence and adult knowingness. Using the pristine qualities of illustration, his painting conveys a brittle fragility, visually distilling the precarious balance between love, hate, and sexual desire.


Gerald Davis

Hunter

2004
acrylic on canvas

218.4 x 165.1cm

“Usually, I paint things that I am fond of.” Gerald Davis explains, “I think the best images I have made are done out of love. I think of the paintings as tributes to the subjects they depict, so I want them to be as seductive and beautiful as I can make them.”

Davis’s work is inspired from an unlikely combination of artists, including Al Jaffee, R. Crumb, Robert Yarber, and Pieter Bruegel the Elder; the exaggerated style of cartoon illustration befittingly describes his contemporary suburban folklore. In Hunter, Davis’s portrait of a boyhood mate is at once tragic and comic. Recalling the twee innocence of Normal Rockwell, Davis’s hero is rendered repulsed, inept, and pathetic; his entire canvas radiates a whitened queasy pallor. The honesty of cartooning allows Davis to explore uncomfortable issues such as gender roles, sexuality, and social exclusion with an unabashed frankness. Presenting this genre on a grand scale, Davis merges the vogue of graphic art with the authority of art history, creating paintings that are both funny and meaningful.


Gerald Davis

Monica

2004
oil on canvas

174 x 126 cm

“Monica is about a girl that I was strongly attracted to in 1986.” Gerald Davis reveals. “I recall having very vivid fantasies about her even at that young age. This event never took place – I never made my feelings known to her – so I made it happen with an image.”
Executed with muted palette, Davis’s surfaces replicate remote dreamscapes. Prepubescent misadventures of scatology, sexual experimentation, and girlfriends-that-never-were imbue his paintings with the purifying qualities of confession. Through his practice, Davis strives to expose ‘hidden truths’, excavating intrinsic beauty from the abject and grotesque. His canvases operate as accolades to their abashed narratives, affirming humility as a shared human value.


Gerald Davis

Linsey's poo (Diptych)

2005
Oil on Canvas

213.5 x 165cm each panel

Illustrating a childish ‘down there’ curiosity gone terribly wrong, Gerald Davis’s Linsey’s Poo is painted in fragrant teen-girl tones, innocently celebrating the naïve discovery of deviance. Set as a diptych, Davis’s canvases contain both image and text. In the panel on the right, delicate layers of pastel hue trace out the pubescent wishes of x-ray vision, pubis and bowels merging decoratively with tweenie fashion. On the right, a letter describing the joys of containment and relief emerges from Davis’s tangled patterning, the humiliating content humorously at odds with the bubbly script and Beyoncé writing pad.


Gerald Davis

Linsey's poo (Diptych Detail)

2005
Oil on Canvas

213.5 x 165cm each panel

Illustrating a childish ‘down there’ curiosity gone terribly wrong, Gerald Davis’s Linsey’s Poo is painted in fragrant teen-girl tones, innocently celebrating the naïve discovery of deviance. Set as a diptych, Davis’s canvases contain both image and text. In the panel on the right, delicate layers of pastel hue trace out the pubescent wishes of x-ray vision, pubis and bowels merging decoratively with tweenie fashion. On the right, a letter describing the joys of containment and relief emerges from Davis’s tangled patterning, the humiliating content humorously at odds with the bubbly script and Beyoncé writing pad.


Gerald Davis

Animation is not Faggity, 1986

2005
Coloured pencil on paper

127 x 96.5 cm

Presented as a triptych and reminiscent of comic book story frames, Gerald Davis’s Animation Is Not Faggity is laid out in narrative tableaux. Throughout each panel, Davis’s ephemeral and gangly style creates a misfit air of vulnerability, reinforced through uncomfortable perspective, violent cropping, and inclusion of ominous details. Rendered in cinematic sepia tones, Davis uses soft lighting for dramatic effect, providing religious overtones to his fable of bullying; the figure in the final panel is posed similarly to historical depictions of the tortured St. Sebastian.


Gerald Davis

Leaf House

2007
Oil on canvas

264 x 198 cm



ARTIST INFORMATION




Gerald Davis's BIOGRAPHY



1974
Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania


SOLO EXHIBITIONS


2006
Drawings, John Connelly Presents, New York
Paintings, Salon 94, New York

2005
Drawings, Tall Wall Space, The University of La Verne, La Verne
Paintings & Drawings, Black Dragon Society, Los Angeles

2003
Gerald Davis: Drawings & Paintings, Black Dragon Society, Los Angeles


GROUP EXHIBITIONS


2006
USA Today, Saatchi Gallery, London
Fall, Black Dragon Society, Los Angeles
From L.A., Baronian Francey, Brussels, Belgium
LAXed: Paintings from the Other Side, Peres Projects, Berlin, Germany

2005
Gerald Davis/Charles Irvin/Jennifer Rochlin, Shane Campbell, Oak Park
Christmas in July, Black Dragon Society, Los Angeles
Exploding Plastic Inevitable, Bergdorf Goodman, New York

2004
Sign of the Covenant, John Connelly Presents, New York
Black Dragon Society, Apex Art, New York

2003
Smoking Pencils, Rolling Papers, Black Dragon Society, Los Angeles

2002
My Problem, Counterpoint Gallery, Los Angeles

2001
Drawing Invitational, Optimistic Gallery, Chicago

1999
MFA Thesis Exhibition, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago
No Metaphors, FGA Space, Chicago

1997
Screenings, FGA Space, Chicago

 


Other artists in PAINT

Ellen Altfest | Helene Appel | Whitney Bedford | Eduardo Berliner | Katherine Bernhardt | Amy Bessone | Shannon Bool | Cris Brodahl | Clayton Brothers | Nick Byrne | Mathew Cerletty | Matthew Chambers | Michael Cline | Dan Colen | Justin Craun | Adam Cvijanovic | Ian Davis | Gerald Davis | Stef Driesen | Nicole Eisenman | Dee Ferris | John Finneran | Jason Fox | Michael Fullerton | Ry Fyan | Julia Goldman | Nick Goss | Valerie Hegarty | Shara Hughes | Tillman Kaiser | Raffi Kalenderian | Khalif Kelly | Anya Kielar | John Korner | Miltos Manetas | Lucy McKenzie | Bjarne Melgaard | Jin Meyerson | Ian Monroe | Kristine Moran | Wangechi Mutu | Jon Pylypchuk | Tal R | Stefan Sandner | Dana Schutz | Jeni Spota | Martina Steckholzer | Jansson Stegner | Henry Taylor | David Thorpe | Helen Verhoeven | Kelley Walker | Andro Wekua | Paula Wilson | Haeri Yoo
 

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