Number 34: “Cone Down,” 2022-23. Acrylic on 20-inch diameter canvas, mounted on metal and wood backing, installed as a diamond.
Last fall after making 34 paintings I fell very ill, and was unable to get a correct diagnosis until February 2023. They finally figured it out: I had severe anemia with life-threatening complications. It was rough going. I was very sick and mentally low. I’ve been healing and feeling better, looking at these works with a new eye and new determination. With any luck, there may be a few more to come.
About the new paintings:
The “Plumb Bob” series began during the Covid quarantine in 2021 with five small rectangular paintings. I had not put paint to canvas in 15 years, so it was a slow start. As I worked, I decided to abandon the tyranny of the perspective grid that has shaped most of my work over the decades. I threw out perspective and with it my trademark illusionary shapes such as slabs, dodecagons, cubes, planks, and staurolites, reverting to my flat hard-edge beginnings. (Similarly, when I was in art school at SFAI, I realized I couldn’t keep going with Abstract Expressionism which by the mid-1960s was out of gas and no longer the hot new thing. Pop art, nascent minimalism and hard-edge painting were on the way up.)
In 2021, a desire to “find the center” drove me to pick what seemed like a cliché – a circle. Inspiration came from one of my earliest and best paintings, “Target”, a 1963 14-inch hard-edge acrylic and canvas circle (painted on a round chair bottom found in an abandoned room at the old Primalon Roller Rink studio in San Francisco). There is no perspective in a circle, unless you are looking down on it, as in the polar view. The idea of a plumb bob helped me find the centers.
I found there are only a few divisions I could utilize in a flat circle. I could make concentric bands; I could divide it into any number of pie-slices including quarters; or I could give it horizontal and vertical stripes — plus a combination of all those to make a pattern such as a quartered checkerboard. “Target” guided me to spherical tops and bottoms and opposite poles of light and dark, black and white, up and down — without perspective.
I mounted the new circles on square backings to better define their objecthood. My friend, artist Frederick Smith, suggested I try hanging them as diamonds instead, which I think was a great insight. I’m hoping to finish the backing frames and final touchups before next year.
Once again, it ain’t over ’til it’s over.
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Here’s an affordable way to get a little of the action, such as it is. Find “Cone Down” as a printed, framed photo:
https://kitschen-art.com/collections/ronald-davis-12-x-12-prints
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Ronald I know you’re passionate about your work and possess a work ethic like mine which is persistent and begins upon waking. Your plumb bob series is extraordinary because the target format has so many different parallel worlds connected to it.
Glad you’re on the mend. Your work is brilliant and I love the personal musings about them.
Carry on!
Best regards, Howard