Greg Davis Photography

Greg Davis Photography Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Greg Davis Photography, Photographer, 1 Near the Cultural District, Fort Worth, TX.

Est. 2005 | Archival Limited Editions | Illuminate Art Space Fort Worth | Published | 6th Gen Baylor’92 | Current: | Next: Coconut Grove Art Fest and Gasparilla Art Fest

“Roots” 18x27 on Archival Museum Rag.  Edition of 100 Limited Fine Art Custom FramedVisit gregdavisphotography.com or DM...
04/28/2026

“Roots” 18x27 on Archival Museum Rag. Edition of 100 Limited Fine Art Custom Framed

Visit gregdavisphotography.com or DM me for more details.

Thanks as always to my collectors and followers for the support.

Welcome new followers I would like to introduce myself…My journey as a photographer began in 2004 (technically in 1987 h...
04/28/2026

Welcome new followers I would like to introduce myself…My journey as a photographer began in 2004 (technically in 1987 high newspaper photographer) when I left a corporate career and set out to travel the world with a simple camera and a deep curiosity about people and place. That experience reshaped how I see the world. Since then, my work has taken me from remote villages and spiritual pilgrimages to vibrant streets and sacred cultural traditions, always guided by a desire to witness and honor the human experience.

CV: https://gregdavisphotography.com/resume/

Much of my photography centers on portraiture and cultural storytelling. I am drawn to faces, hands, rituals, and gestures that reveal the inner lives of my subjects. Whether documenting a spiritual gathering in India, fiestas in Oaxaca, or the quiet beauty of light as it falls across a moment, I strive to create images that feel intimate and timeless—photographs that invite viewers to pause and recognize something of themselves in another life.

I see photography not just as documentation but as a form of connection. Each image is an exchange between photographer and subject, built on trust, curiosity, and respect. My hope is that these photographs serve as quiet reminders that, despite the vast diversity of our world, there is a common spirit that runs through us all.

📷: Esperanza and Greg 2016 (original photo of her 2009) when I went back and found her

04/20/2026

Calling Texas Photographers!

Submit your work to Urban Stories, a juried photography exhibition at Art Center Waco celebrating the rhythm and humanity of urban life—from lively streets to quiet everyday moments.

Juror: Greg Davis
New Deadline: May 4, 2026 | 11:59 PM CST
Exhibition Dates: May 21 – June 27, 2026

Open to photographers in the state of Texas, over the age of 18, to submit original images for this juried photography exhibition celebrating the beauty, complexity, and humanity of urban life.

Juror headshot: Greg Davis, photo by Curtis Callaway, 2026.

Ready to submit?
Visit https://artcenterwaco.org/ for full details.

https://conta.cc/4tC57YBImage of the Month (April26) - Greg Davis Photography
04/06/2026

https://conta.cc/4tC57YB
Image of the Month (April26) - Greg Davis Photography

Email from Greg Davis Photography Spring Art Show Season is HERE!   IMAGE OF THE MONTH "Refleciones de Jesus" Oaxaca, Mexico 2019 at the workshop of Maesto Jacobo Angeles LIMITED EDITIONS AVAILABLE U

Central Texas Photographers!  Looking forward to seeing your submissions!
03/30/2026

Central Texas Photographers! Looking forward to seeing your submissions!

Calling Texas Photographers!

Submit your work to Urban Stories, a juried photography exhibition at Art Center Waco celebrating the rhythm and humanity of urban life—from lively streets to quiet everyday moments.

Juror: Greg Davis
New Deadline: May 4, 2026 | 11:59 PM CST
Exhibition Dates: May 21 – June 27, 2026

Open to photographers in the state of Texas, over the age of 18, to submit original images for this juried photography exhibition celebrating the beauty, complexity, and humanity of urban life.

Juror headshot: Greg Davis, photo by Curtis Callaway, 2026.

Ready to submit?
Visit https://artcenterwaco.org/ for full details.

❤️ MELW
02/15/2026

❤️ MELW

BIG ANNOUNCEMENT!“I’m deeply honored that this piece—and Alejandro’s mask—will live together in a permanent museum colle...
02/08/2026

BIG ANNOUNCEMENT!

“I’m deeply honored that this piece—and Alejandro’s mask—will live together in a permanent museum collection. This image represents lineage, place, and the shared human language of art that transcends borders.”

As a South East Texan native (Livingston), I'm very honored to announce that the Art Museum of Southeast Texas in Beaumont will be adding a Greg Davis Photography piece to their permanent collection entitled "El Orgullo (pride) de Juxtlahuaca". Juxtlahuaca is a small village in the indigenous Mixtec region of NW Oaxaca, Mexico. Along with the image, the museum will be adding a hand carved diablo mask from Master Folk artist, Alejandro VERA Guzman. Alejandro carved all of the masks you see in the image.

What makes this so special is that Alejandro's daughter, Blanca is the one dancing in the front of the photo, hence, "The Pride of Juxtlahuaca". This image also relates to the cultural significance and deep meaning behind Alejandro's art. The devil masks harken back to the Spaniards arrival in the new world, spreading Catholicism and making awares the omnipresence temptations of El Diablo and the price paid for violating the Word.

When my latest exhibition, Oaxacan Gold, premiered at the Art Center Waco, Alejandro and his wife, also named Blanca, were in Waco for the opening. They spent time with me and Amy in Austin and we took them down to Wimberley. None us spoke much of the others language but we were able to have some great conversations. While walking along the river there, Alejandro had an ah ha moment and shared that the trees growing by the river there were in the same family as the trees that he used in Mexico to carve his masks.....Montezuma Cypress! He told us that they never cut down a tree, it always falls naturally, and it falls heavy. Because of the proximity of the cypress trees to water, they are full of water. He said it takes about a year and half to two years for the water to fully evaporate from a fallen tree, but once it has dried, he starts his work. The nature of the water cavities left, presents a porous canvas to carve from, leaving the wood much softer, allowing him to create much more texture in the beards and overall in his carvings.

I hope to be able to bring Oaxacan Gold to another museum and/or art center. The Texas Commission on the Arts and National Arts Endowment has funded it in the past but funding for the arts has come under attack.

To learn more visit the virtual tour at
http://tinyurl.com/oaxacangoldvituraltour

Special thanks to my guides, Rodion Gorin, Sharon Knauss and Ferchow.

Humbled to be in this collection. AMSET’s permanent collection represents over 430 artists, including: Robert Rauschenberg, John Alexander, Maude Carron, Dixie Friend Gay, Carlomagno Pedro Martinez and Jacobo Ángeles Ojeda both in Oaxacan Gold), Angélica Delfina Vásquez Cruz, James Surls, Mary McCleary, Billy Hassell, Celia Eberle, Johnnie Swearingen, Burgess Dulaney, David Cargill, Felix “Fox” Harris, David Bates and Jesús Moroles.

And fellow photographers:
Paul Caponigro
Keith Carter
James Evans
Robert Langham
ORufus Lovett

BIG ANNOUNCEMENT!  “I’m deeply honored that this piece—and Alejandro’s mask—will live together in a permanent museum col...
02/06/2026

BIG ANNOUNCEMENT! “I’m deeply honored that this piece—and Alejandro’s mask—will live together in a permanent museum collection. This image represents lineage, place, and the shared human language of art that transcends borders.”

As a South East Texan native (Livingston), I’m very honored to announce that the Art Museum of Southeast Texas in Beaumont will be adding a piece to their permanent collection entitled “El Orgullo (pride) de Juxtlahuaca”. Juxtlahuace is a small village in the indigenous Mixtec region of NW Oaxaca, Mexico. Along with the image, the museum will be adding a hand carved diablo mask from Master Folk artist, Alejandro VERA Guzman. Alejandro carved all of the masks you see in the image.

What makes this so special is that Alejandro’s daughter, is the one dancing in the front of the photo, hence, “The Pride of Juxtlahuaca”. This image also relates to the cultural significance and deep meaning behind Alejandro’s art. The devil masks harken back to the Spaniards arrival in the new world, spreading Catholicism and making awares the omnipresence temptations of El Diablo and the price paid for violating the Word.

SPIRITUAL SADHU, NEPALIn Hinduism, a sadhu is a common term for a renounced ascetic or practitioner of yoga who has give...
01/14/2026

SPIRITUAL SADHU, NEPAL

In Hinduism, a sadhu is a common term for a renounced ascetic or practitioner of yoga who has given up pursuit of the first three Hindu goals of life: k**a, artha and dharma, or pleasure, wealth, and duty.

A sadhu is solely dedicated to achieving moksha, or liberation, through meditation and contemplation of God. Throughout India and Nepal, sadhus wander here and there in search of spritual enlightenment. I came across the path of this particular sadhu in the city center of Kathmandu near the Kumari Chowk. His mane, dreaded and never having been cut, nearly reached the ground.

Olympus C750
2004
Kathmandu, Nepal

Available Large Signed Archival Limited Editon and small matted print.

Ever enlightened over “crisp” pancakes.
01/12/2026

Ever enlightened over “crisp” pancakes.

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1 Near The Cultural District
Fort Worth, TX
76107

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