Louis Davis

Louis Davis
Born May 1860
Abingdon, Oxfordshire
Died 1941
Nationality English
Education Christopher Whall
Known for Illustrator, water colourist, stained glass artist
Notable work Works of Louis Davis
Movement Pre-Raphaelite, Arts and Crafts Movement
Spouse(s) Edith Webster
Louis Davis, Stained Glass Window in Dunblane Cathedral

Louis Davis (May 1860 – 1941) was an English watercolourist, book illustrator and stained-glass artist. He was active in the Arts and Crafts Movement and Nikolaus Pevsner referred to him as the last of the Pre-Raphaelites.

Personal life

Louis Davis was born May 1860 and raised in Abingdon, Oxfordshire on East St Helen Street. He was the son of Marianne and Gabriel Davis. His mother, also known as Mary Ann, was from Ewelme, Oxfordshire. His father was a manufacturer, with an interest in the Davis Engineering and Launch Building Company, which built and refurbished boats, barges and canals. Gabriel Davis was also a grain, alcohol and coal merchant. 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 in Tewkesbury, 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 never had 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 due to 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

Davis was educated at Abingdon School. 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 in Dorking. 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 by the St Mary's Church in Stamford, Lincolnshire. He also, among other talented artists, was within the circle of artists with whom Whall had mentored and collaborated.[1]

Career

Davis knew William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. He was a member of the Art Workers Guild[1][2] and the Society of Painters in Tempera.

Illustrator and painter

His first artistic fields starting around 1886 were illustration, such as his work for the English 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

Louis Davis, Window at Dunblane Cathedral

A few years after having worked with Christopher Wall, Davis worked with Mary Lowndes and Alfred J. Drury at Lowndes and Drury. He worked first in their location in Chelsea and then at their Glass House studio in Fulham, London from 1906 on. When the volume of work that Davis commissioned exceeded his ability to have the works made, he contracted with the London-based James Powell & Sons to 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 friends Edward Woore and Karl Parsons made 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 a Cheltenham College World War I memorial window and, in Rockbeare in Devon, a window for St Mary's Church.[1]

Stained-glass works

Among his more important work, in a distinctive Arts' and Crafts' style, was his scheme for glazing the choir windows at Dunblane Abbey (1913).[1][2]

Legacy

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Louis Davis. Abingdon School. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Louis Davis. Archived 6 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Sussex 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. ISBN 978-1-57958-315-6. p. 198.

Further reading

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