Exhibitions

Wade in the Water

Vaughn Davis Jr.

May 20 -June 27, 2026

Three vertical fabric banners with abstract watercolor patterns in shades of purple, blue, and orange, hanging from the ceiling and touching the wooden floor. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Photo: Matthew Gordon

 

Superhouse is pleased to present Wade in the Water, a solo exhibition by Vaughn Davis Jr., on view from May 20 through June 27, 2026, at 120 Walker Street, 6R, New York. The exhibition brings together a group of new works alongside a site-responsive installation that approaches painting not as image, but as a condition shaped by action, material, and space.

Working on unstretched canvas, Davis Jr applies pigment while the surface remains wet, allowing color to bleed, pool, and disperse. Water functions as both medium and agent, carrying dye across the surface before receding. The canvas is then cut, folded, and creased, shifting from a passive support into an active structure. What begins as a field becomes a form: painting is not composed so much as it is altered, stressed, and reconfigured through physical intervention.

 
An art gallery with white walls and wooden floors displaying colorful abstract textile artworks hanging on the wall. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Installation view

Abstract mixed media artwork hanging on a gallery wall, featuring red, black, yellow, and beige colors with textured and dripped paint effects.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Darwin’s Movement, 2026

Close-up view of abstract fabric art with layered black, red, yellow, and multicolored textures, featuring frayed edges and stitched details. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Darwin’s Movement detail

A piece of fabric or paper with an abstract pattern in shades of purple, blue, and black, draped or folded against a plain off-white background. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Untitled, 2026

Close-up of an abstract textured artwork with layers of purple, pink, and black colors, with hints of gold shimmer and fine details, creating a dynamic and vibrant visual effect. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Untitled detail

Red and black scarf draped on a plain white wall. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Waves, 2026

 

Much of this work originates on the studio floor, where the artist moves across the surface as dye saturates the fabric. Mark-making extends beyond the brush to include tearing, bending, and pressure—gestures that register directly in the material. The resulting works occupy an unstable position between painting and sculpture, defined less by image than by the forces that shape them—absorption, weight, and displacement.

In Davis Jr’s practice, the canvas is not a ground for depiction but a site of continual change. Its instability is central: edges rupture, planes collapse, and surfaces refuse to remain fixed. Installed in direct response to the architecture, the works fold into corners, span thresholds, and engage the room as a lived space rather than a neutral container.

The exhibition’s title references the African American spiritual Wade in the Water. To wade is to move within a threshold—neither fully submerged nor fully dry, but navigating a shifting, unstable ground  where movement is cautious, responsive, and contingent. That condition is both conceptual and material in Davis Jr’s work. Water initiates each composition, but its presence lingers as a logic: forms remain suspended between states, not fully resolved as painting or sculpture, but held in a space of transition. This sense of partial immersion extends to the installation, where each work is contingent on its placement and remains open to adjustment, negotiation, and change.

Wade in the Water positions painting as an active, time-based process—one that resists fixed identity and instead holds form in a state of ongoing transition.

 
An abstract painted fabric artwork hung on a white gallery wall, with a mix of red, black, yellow, and gray colors, extending to the wooden floor underneath. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Darwin’s Movement Pt. 2, 2026

Close-up of abstract artwork with red, yellow, and black splashes and streaks, paper edge visible on the left. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Darwin’s Movement Pt. 2 detail

Torn fabric with galaxy galaxy printed design hanging on a white wall, partially touching wooden floor. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Blue Fall, 2026

Close-up of a dark blue, textured piece of fabric with irregular frayed edges, hanging against a plain white wall. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Blue Fall detail

Art gallery with abstract colorful paintings hanging on white walls and ceiling track lighting. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Installation view

Abstract mixed media artwork with red, black, orange, and white splatters and smudges on a vertical rectangular canvas. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr Untitled (Strip in Orange and Black), 2026 (alternate configuration)

Close-up of a textile with red and black abstract pattern and silver glitter accents, hanging against a plain light wall. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr Untitled (Strip in Orange and Black) detail

A long, vertical strip of fabric with blue, purple, and white watercolor-like patterns, resting on a light wooden floor against a plain white wall. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Untitled, 2026

A rolled textile with purple and blue shades and star-like patterns, partially unrolled on a wooden floor. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Vaughn Davis Jr. Untitled detail

A vertical red and black abstract painting hanging on a white wall in a gallery, with a wooden floor and part of a red pipe visible in the corner. Vaughn Davis Jr. at Superhouse.

Installation view

 

About Vaughn Davis Jr
Vaughn Davis Jr. (b. 1995) is an artist whose practice expands abstraction through the physical deconstruction of painting. Working across painting, sculpture, and installation, he approaches the canvas as both surface and object. Through pouring, soaking, tearing, folding, and creasing, he alters the support and allows gravity and tension to shape the work. His compositions sit between painting and sculpture and register movement, pressure, and change.

Davis Jr received his Bachelor of Fine Arts from Webster University in St. Louis, USA. He has presented solo exhibitions at Romer Young Gallery in San Francisco, USA; Dimensions Variable in Miami, USA; CAM.Contemporarie in Chicago, USA; and the Aronson Fine Arts Center at Laumeier Sculpture Park in St. Louis, USA. His work has appeared in group exhibitions at Nazarian / Curcio in Los Angeles, USA; New Art Dealers Alliance; Tripoli Gallery in Sagaponack, USA; Malin Gallery in New York, USA; Philip Slein Gallery in St. Louis, USA; and the Front Triennial in Akron, USA. In Fall 2026, Davis Jr will be included in the Great Rivers Biennial in St. Louis, USA and the Counterpublic Triennial in St. Louis, USA