Pablo Davis is an artist working in painting, drawing, sculpture and graphics. His work is represented in seventeen major museum collections, including murals in Detroit, Michigan and Santa Fe, New Mexico. Mr. Davis has completed more than three thousand portrait drawings and paintings, and is an illustrator for the Saturday Evening Post. He has provided a body of hundreds of posters, banners, leaflets, emblems, oil paintings and several murals to support labor and community organizing movements from 1937 to the present. He was a labor organizer with the United Mine Workers, Electrical, Machine Workers, and United Farm Workers unions. Mr. Davis fought in the Spanish Civil War in 1938, and organized resistance to the Korean and Vietnam wars. He was an organizer in the United States civil rights movement. Besides being an assistant painter with Diego Rivera on the Detroit mural in 1932, he was a guest of Pablo Picasso in France in 1946. He has taught art at five universities and several public schools, and published articles and television documentaries on art and local community and labor history. Mr. Davis received a B.A. at the Philadelphia College of Arts.