Photo by Rob Cusick
Photo by Rob Cusick
Details
Authors: Wells Fray-Smith (Edited by), Eleanor Nairne (Edited by), Paola Malavassi (Edited by)
Hardcover
Publisher: Prestel, March 2025
272 pages, 9.9 x 7.9 inches
Illustrated throughout
ISBN: 9783791377742
About
This striking exhibition catalog celebrates the late artist whose deeply emotional works intermingled realism with abstraction to address complex themes of identity, race, and community.
American artist Noah Davis (1983ā2015) believed āpainting does something to your soul that nothing else can. It is visceral and immediate.ā Drawing on art history, personal archives, anonymous photography found in Los Angelesā flea markets, and his own imagination, he compiled a ravishing body of figurative paintings that explore a range of Black life. Alongside his celebrated paintings, Davis made drawings, collages, and sculptures, and co-founded the Underground Museum.
This elegantly designed volume documents the span of Davisās career and attends to his commitment to representation in the art world and community engagement at the Underground Museum. Alongside new scholarship from writers, artists, and musicians like Tina M. Campt, Claudia Rankine, Marlene Dumas, and Jason Moran, this catalog features high-quality reproductions of Davisās more widely-known works as well as previously unseen archival material. A vital resource for understanding the depth and significance of his practice, this beautiful publication reveals how humanity, humor, imagination, and above all, people, were the epicenter of Davisās work.