David Hayes (sculptor) - David Hayes Solo Exhibitions

David Hayes Solo Exhibitions

2008
  • David Hayes: 60 sculptures in White Plains, New York.
2007
  • Vero Beach Museum of Art; Vero Beach, Florida
  • The Irving Arts Center; Irving, Texas
  • Sculpture in Downtown Syracuse; Syracuse, New York
  • Albertus Magnus College; New Haven, Connecticut
  • Everson Museum of Art; Syracuse, New York
  • The Lauren Rogers Museum of Art; Laurel, Mississippi
  • Ross Art Museum at Ohio Wesleyan University; Delaware, Ohio – Small Sculptures, Drawings and Outdoor Sculpture
2006
  • LSU Museum of Art; Baton Rouge, Louisiana – David Hayes Sculpture
  • Erie Art Museum Annex Gallery; Erie, Pennsylvania – Small Sculptures and Drawings
  • Longview Museum of Fine Arts; Longview, Texas – David Hayes Sculpture
2005
  • Mobile Museum of Art; Mobile, Alabama – Eight Vertical Motifs
  • Hartwick College; Oneonta, New York – 12 Sculptures on Oyaron Hill
  • Krasl Art Center; St. Joseph, Michigan – Small Sculptures and Drawings
  • Yaeger Art Museum; Oneonta, New York – Small Sculptures and Drawings
  • Erie Art Museum; Erie, Pennsylvania – Art Around Erie
2004
  • FIU Biscayne Bay Campus; Miami, Florida – David Hayes Sculpture at Florida International University
  • James A. Michener Art Museum; Doylestown, Pennsylvania – David Hayes Outdoor Sculpture Installation
  • Fort Pierce, St. Lucie County and Core Developers, Florida – Exhibition Without Walls
2003
  • Burt Reynolds Museum; Jupiter, Florida – Inaugural exhibition
  • Orlando, Florida – 5 Screen Sculptures at the University of Central Florida
  • Sculpture Garden & Studio at Gidion’s; Kent, Connecticut – David Hayes Sculpture
2002
  • Lyric Theater Sculpture Garden; Stuart, Florida – Outdoor Sculpture
  • Bradley International Airport; Windsor Locks, Connecticut – Small Sculptures
2001
  • Geary Design; Naples, Florida – David Hayes Sculpture, Graham Nickson Paintings
  • Lyric Theater Sculpture Garden; Stuart, Florida – Outdoor Sculpture
2000
  • Sasaki, Inc.; Watertown, Massachusetts; Sculpture, Maquettes, Wall Reliefs
  • Fordham University Downtown; New York, New York – Wall Sculptures and Drawings
  • Denise Bibro Fine Arts Inc.; New York, New York – David Hayes Steel Sculpture
1999
  • Screen Sculpture Commission, Nicotra Group; Staten Island, New York
  • Colgate University; Hamilton, New York – Sculpture, Maquette Reliefs
1998
  • Mercy Gallery, Loomis Chaffee School; Windsor, Connecticut – Drawings, Macquettes, Reliefs, and Screen Sculptures
  • City of Stamford, Connecticut and Stamford Town Center – Stamford Sculpture Walk: 59 Sculptures in Stamford, Connecticut
  • Tremaine Gallery, Hotchkiss School; Lakeville, Connecticut – Drawings, Macquettes, Reliefs and Polychrome Sculptures
  • Boca Raton Museum of Art; Boca Raton, Florida – Vertical Motifs, Drawings, Macquettes and Large Vertical Motifs
  • Appleton Museum of Art; Ocala, Florida – Large Vertical Motifs
  • Stamford Center for the Arts, Rich Forum; Stamford, Connecticut – David Hayes: Paintings, Acrylic Landscapes and Studies
  • Downtown Stamford and Stamford Town Center; Stamford, Connecticut – Sculpture in Stamford
1997
  • 100 Pearl Gallery; Hartford, Connecticut – Sculpture, Drawings and Macquettes
  • The Gallery, University of New Haven; West Haven, Connecticut – Sculpture and Paintings
  • Southern Vermont Art Center; Manchester, Vermont – Screen Sculptures
  • Gulf Coast Art Center; Belleair, Florida – Screen Sculptures
  • Orlando City Hall; Orlando, Florida – Screen Sculptures
  • Hines Building; Boston, Massachusetts – Five Screen Sculptures
  • Hayes Modern Gallery; Naples, Florida – Sculptures, Drawings and Macquettes
1996
  • Prudential Center; Boston, Massachusetts – Screen Sculptures
  • Gulf Coast Art Center; Belleair, Florida – Screen Sculptures
  • The Pingry School; Martinsville, New Jersey – Sculpture, Drawings and Macquettes
1994
  • Anderson Gallery, Buffalo, New York – A Survey of Screen Sculptures – Sculptures, Macquettes and Drawings.
1993
  • Elaine Benson Gallery, Bridgehampton, New York – Screen Sculptures
1992
  • Gallerie Françoise; Baltimore, Maryland – David Hayes—Outdoor Sculpture
1991
  • Neville-Sargent Gallery; Chicago, Illinois – Sculpture, Macquettes, Drawings and Installation Photographs
1990
  • Indiana University Art Museum; Bloomington, Indiana – Sculpture, Macquettes and Gouaches
1989
  • Snite Museum of Art; University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana – Sculpture, Macquettes and Gouaches. Exhibition travels to Indiana University Art Museum
1988
  • Station Plaza; Stamford, Connecticut – Outdoor Sculpture
1987
  • Albertus Magnus College; New Haven, Connecticut – Outdoor Sculpture and Wall Reliefs
1986
  • Shippee Gallery; New York, New York – Vertical Motif Series
1985
  • Visual Images Gallery; Wellfleet, Massachusetts – Sculpture, Gouaches and Small Vertical Motifs
1984
  • Visual Images Gallery; Wellfleet, Massachusetts – Sculpture, Gouaches, and Painted Reliefs
  • Shippee Gallery; New York, New York – Recent Sculpture and Works on Paper
1983
  • Wesleyan Potters; Middletown, Connecticut – Sculpture, Drawings, and Ceramics
  • Visual Images Gallery; Wellfleet, Massachusetts – Sculpture, Drawings, Ceramics and Small Bronzes
  • Rensselaer County Council for the Arts; Troy, New York – Sculpture, Drawings, and Reliefs
1982
  • Sunne Savage Gallery; Boston, Massachusetts – Sculpture and Drawings
  • Elaine Benson Gallery; Bridgehampton, New York – Sculpture and Models
  • Visual Images Gallery; Wellfleet, Massachusetts – Sculpture, Drawings, and Ceramics
1981
  • Bard College; Annandale-on-Hudson, New York – Outdoor Sculpture
  • Old State House; Hartford, Connecticut – Sculpture on Old State House Lawn
  • June 1 Gallery; Bethlehem, Connecticut – Sculpture and Drawings
  • Visual Images Gallery; Wellfleet, Massachusetts – Sculpture, Gouaches, Ceramics
  • University of Maryland, Baltimore County Campus; Catonsville, Maryland – Cross Section, Drawings, Ceramics, Tapestries, Sculpture
1980
  • Bethel Gallery and Bethel Library grounds; Bethel, Connecticut – Sculpture Inside/Outside
  • Art Museum and City of Fitchburg; Fitchburg, Massachusetts – Sculpture, Drawings, and Ceramics
  • Saratoga Performing Arts Center; Saratoga Springs, New York – Outdoor Sculpture
  • Skidmore College; Saratoga Springs, New York – Sculpture & Drawings
1979
  • Amherst College; Amherst, Massachusetts – Sculpture
  • Nassau County Museum; Sands Point, New York – Outdoor Sculpture
  • The Gallery, G. Fox & Co.; Hartford, Connecticut
  • White Mountains Center for the Arts; Jefferson, New Hampshire
  • Plymouth State College; Plymouth, New Hampshire
  • University Library, University of Connecticut; Storrs, Connecticut – Sculpture in the Library
1978
  • Museum of Fine Arts and City of Springfield; Springfield, Massachusetts – On Loan to Springfield: Sculpture, Ceramics, Drawings
  • Choate Rosemary Hall; Wallingford, Connecticut – Outdoor Sculpture
  • State University of New York; Albany, New York – Sculpture and Drawings
  • Manchester Community College; Manchester, Connecticut – Outdoor Sculpture
  • Dartmouth College; Hanover, New Hampshire – Sculpture on Tuck Mall
1977
  • Franz Bader Gallery; Washington, D.C. – Sculpture and Ceramics
  • George Washington University; Washington, D.C. – Outdoor Sculpture
  • Georgetown University Hospital; Washington, D.C. – Five Sculptures
  • DeCordova Museum; Lincoln, Massachusetts – Outdoor Sculpture
1976
  • Danbury, Connecticut – Sculpture in the City
1975
  • Everson Museum of Art; Syracuse, New York – Sculpture
  • Brockton Art Center; Fuller Memorial, Brockton, Massachusetts
1974
  • Copley Square and Dartmouth Street Mall; Boston, Massachusetts
  • Martha Jackson Gallery; New York – Ceramics
  • Columbus Gallery of Fine Art; Columbus, Ohio
  • Sunne Savage Gallery; Boston, Massachusetts
1973
  • Munson Gallery; New Haven, Connecticut
  • Sunne Savage Gallery; Boston, Massachusetts
  • Albany Institute of History & Art; Albany, New York
  • Gallery Five East; East Hartford, Connecticut
1971
  • Harvard University, Hunt Hall; Cambridge, Massachusetts
  • New Britain Museum of American Art; New Britain, Connecticut
  • Agra Gallery; Washington, D.C.
1970
  • University of Connecticut; Storrs, Connecticut
  • Manchester Community College; Manchester, Connecticut
  • St. Joseph College; West Hartford, Connecticut
1969
  • Bard College; Annandale-on-Hudson, New York
  • Willard Gallery; New York
  • Arizona State University; Tempe, Arizona
1968
  • Galerie De Haas; Rotterdam, Holland – Ceramics
1966
  • Lyman Allen Museum; New London, Connecticut
  • Houston Festival of Arts; Houston, Texas
  • Willard Gallery; New York
  • David Anderson Gallery; Paris
1963
  • Root Art Center, Hamilton College; Clinton, New York – Sculpture and Drawings
1962
  • University of Notre Dame and Indiana University; Notre Dame and Bloomington, Indiana – Retrospective Exhibition of Sculpture and Drawing
1961
  • Willard Gallery, New York
1960
  • Sharon Creative Art Foundation; Sharon, Connecticut – Two-man show with Cleve Gray
1959
  • Lyman Allen Museum; New London, Connecticut
  • Museum of Modern Art; New York – New Talent Series
1958
  • Wesleyan University; Middletown, Connecticut
1955
  • Indiana University; Bloomington, Indiana – Thesis Exhibition

Read more about this topic:  David Hayes (sculptor)

Famous quotes containing the words david, hayes and/or solo:

    I did not wish to take a cabin passage, but rather to go before the mast and on the deck of the world, for there I could best see the moonlight amid the mountains. I do not wish to go below now.
    —Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    When General Motors has to go to the bathroom ten times a day, the whole country’s ready to let go. You heard of that market crash in ‘29? I predicted that.... I was nursing a director of General Motors. Kidney ailment, they said; nerves, I said. Then I asked myself, “What’s General Motors got to be nervous about?” “Overproduction,” I says. “Collapse.”
    —John Michael Hayes (b. 1919)

    All mothers need instruction, nurturing, and an understanding mentor after the birth of a baby, but in this age of fast foods, fast tracks, and fast lanes, it doesn’t always happen. While we live in a society that provides recognition for just about every life event—from baptisms to bar mitzvahs, from wedding vows to funeral rites—the entry into parenting seems to be a solo flight, with nothing and no one to mark formally the new mom’s entry into motherhood.
    Sally Placksin (20th century)