Stuart Davis: in Full Swing
Stuart Davis: in Full Swing
Stuart Davis: in Full Swing
INDEXES ON
PAGES 36 & 37
Swing Landscape, 1938. Oil on canvas, 86 by 1731/8 inches. Indiana University Art Museum
port from Rockport. The outline of the house is still
there, albeit almost unrecognizable as a house without prior comparison with Town Square. Words,
pieces of words, calligraphic lines and squiggles
whose meanings, if they have any, must be grappled
with in terms of the painting rather than according
to external standards.
Garage, which appears in both works, is no longer
merely a sign in Report From Rockport, or, if it is, it
is a sign here of Daviss artistic choice. Indeed, the G is
repeated, varied, scrawled across the canvas, almost a
treble clef in one place, almost in lower case script
a figure eight or symbol of infinity in another.
You can interact with a Stuart Davis painting or a
Philip Marlowe novel on a number of levels. You can
simply enjoy them as beautiful objects, page-turners,
summer viewing and reading. You can try to situate
them in relation to schools, genres, styles where
does Sem fit in relation to Abstract Expressionism
or Pop Art?; where do the Marlowe novels stand in
relation to, say, Ellery Queen or Mike Hammer? Or
you can experience them with what Aaron Copland
called exalted pleasure, watching the narrative and
characters in Chandler or the shapes and colors in
Davis as they provide and deny perspective, as they
dance around one another, morphing and riffing end-
The Mellow Pad, 194551. Oil on canvas, 26 by 421/8 inches. Brooklyn Museum