Hedda Sterne - Group Shows (Abbreviated List)

Group Shows (Abbreviated List)

  • 1943 - Art of This Century gallery, N.Y., "Exhibition of 31 Women"
  • 1949 - Whitney Museum Annual, '59, '67
  • 1951 - Los Angeles County Museum
  • 1951 - Third Tokyo International Art Exhibition
  • 1954 - Art Institute of Chicago Annual, '55, '57, '60, '61
  • 1955 - Museum of modern Art
  • 1955 - Corcoran Gallery Annual, Washington, D.C., '56, '58, '63
  • 1955 - Whitney Museum, "New Decade Show"
  • 1955 - Carnegie International, '58, '61, '62, '64
  • 1955 - Rhode Island School of Design, '56
  • 1956 - Venice Biennial
  • 1956 - Smithsonian Institution
  • 1956 - Art Institute of Chicago, "American Artists Paint the City"
  • 1957 - Minnesota Institute of Art, "American Painting"
  • 1958-59 - American Federation of Arts, University of Iowa, "Contemporary American Paintings"
  • 1960 - Mexico City Biennial
  • 1961 - Art Institute of Chicago, "Painting & Sculpture"
  • 1962 - Molton Gallery, London "Four American Painters"
  • 1964 - Cincinnati Art Museum
  • 1964 - Das Kunstwerk, "The Work of Art"
  • 1966 - Heron Museum of Art
  • 1969 - Phillips Collection, Westmoreland Museum
  • 1971 - Finch College, "Artists at Work"
  • 1972 - Guild Hall, East Hampton, "Then & Now"
  • 1971 - Minnesota Museum of Art, "Drawings USA/71"
  • 1971 - Heckscher Museum, Huntington, N.Y.
  • 1983, May 25-June 18, Betty Parsons Gallery. Mino Argento, Jack Youngerman, David Budd, Calvert Coggeshall, Cleve Gray, Lee Hall, Minoru Kawabata, Richard Pousette-Dart, Leon Polk Smith, Hedda Sterne, Ed Zutrau and Sari Dienes (among others).
  • 1994 - Galerie de l'École des Beaux-Arts, Lorient, "Le Temps d'un Dessin", curated by Philippe Briet, drawings by 86 artists living in the United States (March 16-April 6).

Read more about this topic:  Hedda Sterne

Famous quotes containing the words group and/or shows:

    Laughing at someone else is an excellent way of learning how to laugh at oneself; and questioning what seem to be the absurd beliefs of another group is a good way of recognizing the potential absurdity of many of one’s own cherished beliefs.
    Gore Vidal (b. 1925)

    Our Last Will and Testament, providing for the only future of which we can be reasonably certain, namely our own death, shows that the Will’s need to will is no less strong than Reason’s need to think; in both instances the mind transcends its own natural limitations, either by asking unanswerable questions or by projecting itself into a future which, for the willing subject, will never be.
    Hannah Arendt (1906–1975)