Flower Machine 1964 by Gene Davis
Flower Machine
Gene Davis and the Precision of Verticality in Flower Machine
Few works from the Color Field movement capture the tension between mechanical precision and organic vitality as vividly as Gene Davis’s Flower Machine (1964). Created at the height of Washington Color School’s influence, this painting abandons the gestural brushwork of Abstract Expressionism in favor of meticulously aligned vertical stripes—a signature of Davis’s mature style. The title itself suggests contradiction: a "machine" producing something as ephemeral as flowers, rendered through the rigid geometry of parallel bands. As the Smithsonian American Art Museum observes, Davis’s work often explored how systematic repetition could evoke unexpected emotional resonance, a paradox that defines this composition.
The 1964 date places Flower Machine squarely in Davis’s most experimental period, when he began using acrylic paints to achieve the flat, unmodulated color fields that became his hallmark. Unlike the expansive canvases of his contemporaries like Morris Louis or Kenneth Noland, Davis frequently worked on a more intimate scale—here, the original measures just over three feet wide—demanding closer inspection of his stripe variations. The painting’s vertical format (taller than it is wide) reinforces the upward pull of the stripes, creating a visual rhythm that seems to pulse when viewed at length. This was no accident: Davis often spoke of his stripes as "time made visible," a concept that aligns with the kinetic energy implied by the title’s mechanical reference.
Washington Color School and the Stripes That Defined an Era
By 1964, Gene Davis had already spent over a decade refining his approach within the Washington Color School, a movement that emerged in the 1950s as a counterpoint to New York’s Abstract Expressionism. Where Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning emphasized the artist’s physical engagement with the canvas, Davis and his peers—including Helen Frankenthaler and Kenneth Noland—pursued what critic Clement Greenberg called "the optical experience of color alone." For Davis, this meant abandoning brushstrokes entirely in favor of hard-edged stripes applied with masking tape, a method that removed the artist’s hand while intensifying the viewer’s perception of hue and interval.
Flower Machine arrived during a pivotal moment when Davis was transitioning from his early "micro-paintings" (tiny, densely striped works) to larger, more architectonic compositions. The painting’s vertical orientation reflects his growing interest in how stripes could activate wall space, a concern that would later lead to his monumental murals. Unlike Noland’s concentric circles or Louis’s poured veils, Davis’s stripes create a rhythmic field that seems to extend beyond the canvas edges, inviting the wall itself to become part of the composition. This spatial ambiguity—where the artwork’s boundaries feel permeable—became a defining feature of his 1960s output.
Davis’s stripes in Flower Machine perform a sleight of hand: the harder you focus on their uniformity, the more the colors begin to shimmer and breathe, as if the "machine" of the title has sprung to life.
The Mechanics of Flower Machine: How Stripes Create Illusion
Composition: The Architecture of Repetition
The structure of Flower Machine relies on two critical decisions: the width of the stripes and their arrangement across the canvas. Davis varied the stripe widths in subtle increments—some measuring less than a quarter-inch—creating a pulsating effect when viewed from a distance. The narrower stripes appear to recede, while wider bands advance, generating a sense of depth without traditional perspective. This optical mixing was no happy accident; Davis meticulously calculated the proportions to exploit the eye’s tendency to blend adjacent colors, a phenomenon known as simultaneous contrast.
Color: The Alchemy of Acrylic
The painting’s palette deploys high-chroma acrylics in carefully balanced sequences, with warm oranges and reds juxtaposed against cool blues and greens. Unlike oil paints, acrylics allowed Davis to achieve the flat, matte surfaces essential to his vision—colors that don’t shift under different lighting conditions. The title’s floral reference becomes evident in the organic transitions between hues: a cadmium red might bleed visually into a neighboring ultramarine, mimicking the gradual color shifts in petals. Davis often primed his canvases with multiple layers of gesso to prevent the stripes from sinking into the weave, ensuring the edges remained razor-sharp.
Own This Icon of Washington Color School
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The 30×40 cm dimensions of this framed print make it remarkably versatile, but Flower Machine’s high-contrast stripes demand thoughtful placement. The vertical format excels in narrow spaces—consider flanking a console table in an entryway or centering it above a writing desk. For color harmony, pair the print with neutral walls (soft gray or warm white) to let the stripes dominate; the acrylic’s matte finish ensures no glare under track lighting. In larger rooms, group it with other geometric abstractions for a curated gallery wall, but avoid competing patterns—Davis’s work thrives when given room to "breathe." The painting’s scale also suits commercial settings: a home office or boutique hotel lobby, where its rhythmic energy can subtly invigorate the atmosphere.
What type of frame is included, and how is it constructed?
Each print arrives in a gallery-quality frame made from solid wood with a matte black or natural finish, chosen to complement the artwork’s era. The framing process includes acid-free matting and UV-protective acrylic glazing to prevent fading.
Where do you ship, and how long does delivery take?
We offer free shipping to all countries, with no minimum purchase required. Production typically takes 3–5 business days, followed by 5–10 days for global delivery via tracked courier.
How long will the colors remain vibrant?
The print uses archival inks rated for 100+ years under normal lighting conditions. The UV-protective glazing further shields the artwork from sunlight, ensuring the stripes retain their original intensity.
What is your return policy?
You may return your framed print within 30 days of delivery for a full refund. We cover return shipping costs if the artwork arrives damaged or doesn’t match the product description.
Sources & Further Reading
- Smithsonian American Art Museum. "Gene Davis." americanart.si.edu
- The Art Story. "Washington Color School Movement Overview." theartstory.org
- National Gallery of Art. "Gene Davis: Hot Beat (1960)." nga.gov
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