Longfellow’s Wayside Inn, Sudberry, Mass

Albert Davies primitive scene

Albert Davies primitive scene



Albert Webster Davies (1889-1967), New Hampshire

oil on board

18" x 23 1/2", sight

signed "Davies" lower right

$3,800

Provenance: Carlen Galleries, Philadelphia; Joseph D. and Janet M. Shein Collection, Philadelphia

Albert Webster Davies was born on a farm in Salem Depot, New Hampshire, in 1889 a relic of “a time in our American life now past.”  Possessed with an inborn sense of design and feel for color, Davies constantly painted as a child and later worked as a window dresser and theater designer.  He was briefly employed at a mental hospital where he befriended a patient, the landscape artist Albert Blakelock.

Davies retired at the age of sixty-five and turned to painting full-time, seeking to record the treasured memories of his early life.  Robert Carlen, the esteemed Philadelphia gallerist who was an early champion of Edward Hicks and Horace Pippin among others, began representing Davies shortly thereafter.  In 1965 Davies secured a one-man show at Kennedy Galleries in New York, followed by a show at the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Collection in Williamsburg.  As noted in the literature accompanying the exhibition, Davies’ “appreciation of early American architecture, his knowledge of early textile design, his working knowledge of the construction of carriages, sleds, barns, bandstands, county-fair sheds, churches, and his deep sympathy for the human comedy in its pursuit of life, liberty and happiness, all combine to lend his charming pictures an element of documentary value.”

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