ATLANTA --- One of Ulysses Davis' granddaughters has said the artist used to sit in front of the television on election night, a block of wood in hand, ready to start carving a bust of the winner once the election was called.
Until his death in 1990, Davis added each new president to the collection of 40 busts that has become his best-known work. The works are part of an exhibition called The Treasure of Ulysses Davis that opened Saturday at Atlanta's High Museum of Art.
Davis, a barber and self-taught woodcarver from Savannah, carved more than 300 wood figures, reliefs and pieces of furniture in his spare time. Born in 1914, he started whittling as a child, and his works were nationally recognized by the late 1970s.
But most of them have seldom been seen outside his home state because Davis felt the collection, which he called his "treasure," should be seen together. He sought to ensure this by asking that his family arrange for the King-Tisdell Cottage Foundation, an organization devoted to the preservation of African-American culture and history in Savannah, to acquire a majority of the collection after his death.
The King-Tisdell Cottage Foundation acquired 236 carvings from Davis' heirs and received two others as gifts. A majority of the approximately 115 works in the current show are pulled from that group.
The show at the High, which runs through April 5, is the first major traveling exhibition of Davis' art in more than 25 years and is representative of his entire body of work.