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Louis Davis (painter)

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Louis Davis
Born28 May 1860
Died1941
NationalityEnglish
EducationChristopher Whall
Known forIllustrator,water colourist,stained glassartist
Notable workWorks of Louis Davis
MovementPre-Raphaelite,Arts and Crafts Movement
SpouseEdith Webster

Louis Davis(May 1860 – 1941) was an Englishwatercolourist,book illustrator andstained-glassartist. He was active in theArts and Crafts Movement,andNikolaus Pevsnerreferred to him as the last of thePre-Raphaelites.

Personal life[edit]

Louis Davis, stained glass window inDunblane Cathedral

Louis Davis was born on 28 May 1860 and raised inAbingdon, Oxfordshireon East St Helen Street. He was the son of Marianne and Gabriel Davis. His mother, also known as Mary Ann, was fromEwelme,Oxfordshire. His father was a manufacturer, with an interest in the Davis Engineering and Launch Building Company, which built and refurbished boats,bargesandcanals.Gabriel Davis was also a grain, alcohol and coalmerchant.Louis Davis had two older brothers, Arthur and David, and a younger brother named Oliver.[1]

Davis married the much younger Edith Jane Webster in 1901 inTewkesbury, Gloucestershire.Due to the similarity between the faces of women in his works and that of a picture of Edith, it is probable that she was his model for much of his glass work. The couple had no children, but Edith's sister, Ethel, lived with the couple and was a companion and housekeeper for a period of time.[1]

Edith and Louis were both injured in an accidental gas fire and the resulting fumes in 1915. Davis seemed to have suffered a stroke, lost his ability to speak, and occasionally required a wheelchair for mobility. Edith fully recovered from the incident.[1]

Davis died in 1941, after which Edith sold their home and studio and returned to East Anglia where she was raised. She died in the late 1970s.[1]

Education[edit]

1871 Abingdon School day boys, Davis sitting front row, second left

Davis was educated atAbingdon Schoolfrom 1870 to 1875. Recognised as talented, he was awarded a foundation scholarship based upon his artistic skill in 1871.[1]

In 1891 he became a student of the glass artist,Christopher Whall,at his combined home and studio inDorking.One of Whall's first students, Davis lived with his mentor's family for a time. Davis assisted Whall on one of the windows commissioned forSt Mary's ChurchinStamford, Lincolnshire.[1]

Career[edit]

Davis knewWilliam Morris,Edward Burne-Jones,andDante Gabriel Rossetti.He was a member of theArt Workers Guild[1][2]and theSociety of Painters in Tempera.

Illustrator and painter[edit]

His first artistic fields starting around 1886 were illustration, such as his work for theEnglish Illustrated Magazine,and watercolours. His work was exhibited often, but he had an increasing interest in stained-glass work and by 1911 worked exclusively with glass.[1][2]

Stained glass[edit]

Louis Davis, window at Dunblane Cathedral

A few years after having worked with Christopher Wall, Davis worked in London withMary LowndesandAlfred J. DruryatLowndes and Drury.He worked first at their premises inChelsea,then from 1906 at theirGlass Housestudio inFulham.When the volume of work that Davis commissioned exceeded his ability to have the works made, he contracted with the London-basedJames Powell & Sonsto make the works, particularly relying on principal glass-painter Thomas Cowell to interpret and execute the designs. Davis then maintained his own studio at Ewelme Cottage,Pinner.[1][2][3]

Davis photographed images for Whall's 1905 book,Stained Glass Work,and his friendsEdward WooreandKarl Parsonsmade illustrations for the book.[1]

Having suffered from the accidental fire and resulting fumes in 1915, Davis used or reworked previous designs with the assistance of Thomas Cowell from James Powell & Sons for his commissions. Some of his post-1918 work included aCheltenham CollegeWorld War I memorial window and, inRockbearein Devon, a window for St Mary's Church.[1]

Works[edit]

Notable works by Davis include:

Church Location Date(s) Subject and notes
St John the Baptist's Chapel Matlock Bath,Derbyshire 1897 Sacrament of Baptism, East Window
Paisley Abbey Paisley,Renfrewshire 1908 Benedictine Window
St Colmon Parish Church Colmonell,Ayrshire 1910 St Margaret of Scotland
Dunblane Cathedral Dunblane,Perthshire 1915 Benedictine Windows

Legacy[edit]

For his use of vibrant colours, Nikolaus Pevsner referred to Davis as the last of thePre-Raphaelites.[1]In 1935 for a review of his exhibit in London, theOxford Mailsaid that: "Mr Davis, who was born at Abingdon, is one of the last remaining Pre-Raphaelites. He knew SirEdward Burne-Jones,William Morris,Dante Gabriel Rossettiand others. "[1]

The Abingdon Parish Magazine wrote in their obituary of him: "His colour and design satisfy the sense of beauty, and the actual craftsmanship will always be a wonder to those who understand the art of glass-making."[1]

In their obituary of Davis,The Timeswrote: "Mr Davis may be said to have inherited the side of the pre-Raphaelite movement which was concerned with medieval glamour and Celtic twilight rather than with the method of fidelity to nature... Davis was so thoroughly imbued with the spirit of his school that he used all its devices and mannerisms with an easy, natural skill, and the sentiment of his pictures never seemed forced or affected..."[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^abcdefghijklmnoLouis Davis.Archived25 February 2016 at theWayback MachineAbingdon School. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  2. ^abcLouis Davis.Archived6 October 2010 at theWayback MachineSussex Parish Churches. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  3. ^E. Lomas.Guide to the Archive of Art and Design: Victoria and Albert Museum, London.Taylor & Francis; 1 January 2001.ISBN978-1-57958-315-6.p. 198.

Further reading[edit]

  • Nigel Hammond.Louis Davis, 1860–1941.Oxfordshire Local History Journal, January 2006.