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Dale Brockman Davis

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Dale Davis

Role
  
Artist


Dale Brockman Davis hammeruclaedufileadminmediaprograms201502F

Born
  
November 11, 1945
Tuskegee, Alabama

Education
  
BFA at the University of Southern California

Known for
  
Sculpture, Gallerist, Educator

Movement
  
African American history and music

Awards
  
Leimert Park Art Festival, First Place in Sculpture

Patron(s)
  
studied with Carleton Ball

Dale Brockman Davis (born 1945) is a Los Angeles-based African-American artist, gallerist and educator best known for his assemblage sculpture and ceramic work that addresses themes of African American history and music, especially jazz. Along with his brother artist Alonzo Davis, he co-founded Brockman Gallery in Leimert Park. Through the gallery and his broader community work, Davis became an important promoter of African-American artists in Los Angeles.

Contents

Dale Brockman Davis Dale Brockman Davis Now Dig This digital archive Hammer Museum

Biography

Dale Brockman Davis Artist and Gallerist Dale Brockman Davis Reflects on the Watts

Davis was born in Tuskegee, Alabama on November 11, 1945. He moved to Los Angeles in 1956. He studied at Los Angeles City College before earning his B.F.A. at the University of Southern California. There he studied with noted ceramist Carleton Ball. He would eventually moved beyond vessels and other traditional ceramic forms, instead focusing on sculpture. He was inspired by assemblage art scene that emerged in Los Angeles's African-American community following the Watts Rebellion of 1965.

Dale Brockman Davis Artist and Gallerist Dale Brockman Davis Reflects on the Watts

He did graduate work towards his M.F.A. at the University of California, Los Angeles but stopped the program after encountering resistance towards his assemblage style.

Dale Brockman Davis Dale Brockman Davis Leimert Park 08162013

Davis also worked as an art teacher at Dorsey High School.

Dale Brockman Davis Dale Brockman Davis BAILA Black Artists in Los Angeles

Dale and Alonzo Davis ran Brockman Gallery from 1967 to 1989. They were inspired to found the gallery after a consciousness-raising road trip across the United States and Canada in 1966. They named the gallery after their grandmother, Della Brockman. They showcased the work of African-American artists from Los Angeles and elsewhere, provided them with a rare opportunity to exhibit and sell their work in Los Angeles's segregated art scene. Included among their list of local artists were: Charles Wilbert White, Betye Saar, John Outterbridge, Noah Purifoy, Tim Washington, Doyle Lane, and Marion Epting.

Dale Brockman Davis Dale Brockman Davis BAILA Black Artists in Los Angeles

By the early 1970s, the brothers had transformed the gallery into a broader community art space and hosted a festival in Leimert Park.

Awards

Dale Brockman Davis Spoiled Roots Mark Bradford and the Erasure of Community Momus

  • Leimert Park Art Festival, First Place in Sculpture
  • Galleries

    Dale Brockman Davis Dale Brockman Davis BAILA Black Artists in Los Angeles

    Gallery shows include:

  • Gallery Negra
  • Bob Jefferson Gallery, Oakland
  • Ankrum Gallery, Los Angeles
  • Brockman Gallery, Los Angeles
  • Group exhibitions

    He has appeared in many group exhibitions, including:

  • California Black Craftsmen, Mills College Art Gallery, 1970
  • Eleven from California, Studio Museum in Harem, 1972
  • Los Angeles 1972: A Panorama of Black Artists, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1972
  • Collage and Assemblage, Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art, 1975
  • Black Art: The LA Connection, Los Angeles Convention Center, 1982
  • Artists Teachers, Museum of African American Art, Santa Monica, 1983
  • Watts: Art and Social Change in Los Angeles, Haggerty Museum of Art, Marquette University, 2003
  • L.A. Object and David Hammons Body Prints, Tilton Gallery, 2006
  • Distinctly Los Angeles: An African American Perspective, M. Hanks Gallery, Santa Monica, 2009
  • Now Dig This! Art & Black Los Angeles, 1960-1980, Hammer Museum, 2011
  • Places of Validation, California African American Museum, 2011
  • Diverted Destruction 6, California African American Museum and Loft at Liz's, 2013
  • References

    Dale Brockman Davis Wikipedia