Martin Davies (museum director)

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Sir Martin Davies,

CBE FBA FSA (22 March 1908 – 7 March 1975) was a British museum director and civil servant. He worked at the National Gallery
in London from 1930 to 1973, and was Director from 1968.

Davies attended Rugby School, and thereafter read mathematics and modern languages at King's College, Cambridge.[1] He first joined the staff of the National Gallery, the institution to which he was to devote his career, as an attaché in 1930. After being made Assistant Keeper in 1932 he called for improved research on the paintings in the collection, which would eventually come to fruition in the series of catalogues inaugurated by Davies and still being produced by the Gallery today. These set new standards for the catalogues of large collections, and have been widely imitated.

His scholarly work was interrupted from 1938 to 1941 by the need to find a safe home for the National Gallery's paintings at the onset of the

British
schools of painting were published from 1945 to 1946. The much larger Catalogue of the Earlier Italian Schools was published in 1961. Many of these paintings are now covered by published volumes of the new series of catalogues, but for example, only the 17th century French paintings are covered under the new series, whereas Davies covered all French periods.

Davies rose steadily in the ranks at the National Gallery until in 1968 he was appointed Director. The public campaign in 1971 to buy

Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist), Tiepolo (An Allegory with Venus and Time [1]) and Henri Rousseau (Tiger in a Tropical Storm [2]
).

Davies was knighted in 1972, the year before his retirement, and died in 1975.

Bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ Martin, Gregory, "Davies, Sir Martin (1908–1975)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, September 2004. Retrieved 21 November 2022. (subscription required)

References

  • Michael Levey, "Obituaries: Sir Martin Davies," The Burlington Magazine 117.872 (1975), pp. 729–31.