
Evocative Spaces
Dick Davison and Terry Larsen
September 19, 2025 – October 31, 2025
Dick Davison: Drawing always shows the tracks of creativity, it’s immediacy and directness has kept me a devotee. I like making drawings that are larger than my own reach; the immersive aspect of large scale, the sense of being engulfed in the work, is an attraction for me. The work here represents 3 themes that have dominated my work for the past 2 decades. One is about monuments or memorials; how they stand against time (i.e., as compared with our own lives or the ephemeral nature of a reflection in water) as well as how we create them to assuage our own longings, regrets, etc.
Another theme, Visionary landscapes, pays homage to artists whose work is at once regional and visionary in character, such as that of Charles Burchfield and Samuel Palmer, and to the purpose of reiterating the argument of “natural religion,” that nature herself is the clearest evidence of God. The final gallery consists of Biblical themes, reminding us that everything that needs to be known is in those pages.
Terry Larsen: Photography is an art form Terry uses to capture the shapes and composition of a physical, dimensional space into an image that seeks to captivate as the original architecture does. Function is transformed into form and contrast, composed by the light and camera through the vision of the photographer. Italian scenes in the current exhibit provoke a history through the black and white moments that pair well alongside the Biblical and spacial work displayed by Dick Davison.

DICK DAVISON is a professor of the College of Architecture faculty at Texas A&M University, was born in Marlin, Texas in 1953. He received a Bachelor of Environmental Design degree from Texas A&M in 1975. After graduation he pursued his career in art, obtained a BFA and MFA from the University of California at Irvine in 1976 and Washington University in 1979, respectively.
TERRY LARSEN is an Associate Professor in the Department of Visualization at Texas A&M University. For 50 years, he has enjoyed making photographic images. While most of those years were spent in Medium Format Black and White creations, most recently he has been exploring the nature of color and abstract images.