His first solo exhibition was at the
University of Oregon in 1961 and from that point on Davis made his mark in several group exhibitions including the Corcoran Biennial-Second Western Federation of the Arts Traveling Show in 1983 and the First Western Federation of the Arts Biennial in 1979. It was featured at the
Denver Art Museum,
Smithsonian American Art Museum, the
San Francisco Museum of Art, and
Seattle Art Museum. In 2004 Davis had one of his acclaimed shows "Paintings and Works on Paper, 1988-2004" at the
University of Arizona. It was a 15-year survey exhibition including monumental diptychs and triptychs which featured chronicles of his travels in America, Spain, and Germany. According to Charles A. Guerin, Director at the
University of Arizona Museum of Art "Davis was a painter of extraordinary skill who understands the power and potential of the medium. His use of color, contrast, balance, and composition creates drama and dynamic tension within his paintings. His masterful executions of paint on canvas, where realism and abstraction dissolve within transparent and opaque layers of paint, propel his images into and outward from the picture plane. These qualities make Davis' paintings difficult to ignore and rewarding to engage." His works can be found today in a multitude of permanent collections including the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the
Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Hirshhorn Museum of Art, both in Washington, D.C., the Berlinische Museum and the
Martin Gropius Bau, Berlin, Germany, the Hess Collection in Napa, California, the North American Mexican Cultural Institute in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, and in Arizona the
Phoenix Art Museum, the
Tucson Museum of Art, and the
University of Arizona Museum of Art. == Later life ==