Mailing Labels for Artists

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Mailing Labels for Artists Don Begg Brent Cooke Amore/Woody Dorsey/Kokaro PO Box 550 1336 Wood St. Carvers Cochrane , Alberta, Canada T4C 1A7 Victoria, British Columbia, Canada RR 1 Box 192 V9A 5E1 Castleton, VT 05735 Ken Nice Reg Parsons C205 Concession 12, RR #1 713 10th St South Cannington, Ontario, Canada L0E 1E0 Cranbrook , British Columbia, Canada V1C 1S7 Nathan Scott Jim Doubleday Elliot Offner 6375 W. Saanich Road 51 Amherst Road 74 Washington Ave. Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada Pelham, MA 01002 Northampton, MA 01060 V8M 1W8 Yin Deet John Pauplis Michael Updike 157 School St. 387 Commonwealth Road 36 Franklin St. Wayland, MA 01778 Cochituate, MA 01778 Newburyport, MA 01950 George Greenamyer Ralph Helmick Charles Hahn 994 Careswell St. 447 Lowell Ave. 241 Howard Street Marshfield, MA 02050 Newton, MA 02160 Melrose, MA 02176 Richard Gardner Stephen Mirabella Dore Van Dyke Art Deadlines List 1416 Indian Creek Rd. 285 Jacob St. P. O. Box 381067 Amherst, VA 02421 Seekonk, MA 02771 Cambridge, MA 02238 Donald Gerola J. Conklin Brower Hatcher 440 S Main Street David Winton Brown Gall… 148 Congdon St. Woonsocket, RI 02860 68 Hillside Avenue Providence, RI 02906 Providence, RI 02906 Walter Feldman Jonathan Bonner Buzz Masters Art Department P. O. Box 6023 RR 2 45 Lawrence Rd. Brown University Providence, RI 02940 Gray, ME 04039 Providence, RI 02912 Tom White Fred X. Brownstein Kathleen Schneider Tom White Studios P. O. Box 495 179 Main Street 162 Mayville Road North Bennington, VT 05257 Winooski, VT 05404 Bethel, ME 04217 B. Amore Woody Dorsey David Hayes Warren Owens R.R. 1, Box 192 P. O. Box 509 685A Heritage Village Castleton, VT 05735 Coventry, CT 06238 Southbury, CT 06488 Peter Busby Karl Saliter Joy Brown 108 Pritchard Road 149 Popple Swamp Road 463 Segar Mt. Road Cornwall Bridge, CT 06754 Cornwall Bridge, CT 06754 South Kent, CT 06785 Tim Prentice Robert Perless Matthias Alfen 129 W. Lake Road 37 Langhorne Lane 35 France St. Cornwall, CT 06796 Greenwich, CT 06831 So. Glastonbury, CT 06851 Judith Steinberg Clyde Lynds Harry H. Gordon 7 Wallacks Lane 20 Franklin Ave. 17 Old River Rd. Stamford, CT 06902 Wallington, NJ 07057 Lambertville, NJ 08530 Jim Barton John Kaye 212 Georges Road Atlantic Gallery 526 W. 26th St. Studio 512 Dayton, NJ 08810 135 W 29th Street, Suite 601 New York, NY 10001 New York, NY 10001 Jill Burkee Jill Burkee Giancarlo Biagi 56 Ludlow St. 56 Ludlow Street Independent Curators New York, NY 10002 New York, NY 10002 799 Broadway #205 New York, NY 10003 Frank Evans Janet Goldner Bill & Mary Buchen 310 East 12th St. #3G 52 Warren Street, 2nd Floor Sonic Architecture New York, NY 10003 New York, NY 10003 PO Box 20873, Tompkins Square Sta. New York, NY 10009 Harriet Feigenbaum Sook Jin Jo David Klass 49 West 24th Street, 11th Floor 149 West 24th St. A-3B 136 West 24th St. New York, NY 10010 New York, NY 10011 New York, NY 10011 David Morris Helen E. Ramsaran Helene Brandt 455 W. 23rd St. #14F 30 West 13th St. #4A 43 Great Jones St. New York, NY 10011 New York, NY 10011 New York, NY 10012 Madeleine Marx Joel Perlman Peter Reginato 148 Greene St. 250 West Broadway 60 Greene St. New York, NY 10012 New York, NY 10012 New York, NY 10012 Alison Sky Bill Barrett Holly Block 60 Greene St. 11 Worth St. Art in General New York, NY 10012 New York, NY 10013 79 Walker St. New York, NY 10013 Claudia DeMonte Ruth Hardinger Ed McGowin & Claudia DeMonte 96 Grand St. 20 North Moore 96 Grand Street New York, NY 10013 New York, NY 10013 New York, NY 10013 Scott Siken Julian Schnabel Alejandro Fogel 104 Franklin St. 360 West 11th St. 245 E 40th Street, Apt 25H New York, NY 10013 New York, NY 10014 New York, NY 10016 Audrey Flack Michael Dominick Betti-Sue Hertz 110 Riverside Dr. #10A 1755 York Avenue, #18A Bronx Council on the Arts New York, NY 10024 New York, NY 10128 1738 Hone Ave. Bronx, NY 10461 Helene Brandt Robert Sindorf Paul Jeffries 308 West 263 St. 18 Hollis Lane 1743 Clover Road Bronx, NY 10471 Croton, NY 10520 Mohegan, NY 10547 Al Landzberg Ethel K. Goldblatt Najim H. Chechen 685 Fieldstone Road 12 Midoaks Drive 1864 Mountain Road Yorktown Heights, NY 10598 Monroe, NY 10950 Otisville, NY 10963 Robert Adzema Tim Watkins Ron Baron 67A Ludlow La 40 Hoyt St. 580 Driggs Ave. Palisades, NY 10964 Brooklyn, NY 11201 Brooklyn, NY 11211 Jude Tallichet Kiyoshi Ike Jan Hoogenboom 19 Hope St. 420 12th St. Apt. JIR 546 Graham Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11211 Brooklyn, NY 11215 Brooklyn, NY 11222 Thom Merrick Andrze Szczepaniec Joseph Mack 651 Manhattan Ave. #2L 786 Manhattan Ave. #6R 37 Kanes Lane Brooklyn, NY 11222 Brooklyn, NY 11222 Huntington, NY 11743 David T. Haussler Molly Mason 49 Fort Salonga Rd. 111 Beach St. George Rickey Workshop Fort Salonga, NY 11768 Port Jefferson, NY 11777 RD 2, Box 235 East Chatham, NY 12060 Susan Togut Thomas Shepherd Peter Woytuk 623 Nelson Hoff 25 Birch Hill Rd. 92A Bog Hollow Rd. Catskill, NY 12414 Craryville, NY 12521 Wassaic, NY 12592 Rob Fisher Ellen Steinfeld Sculpture Space, Inc. 228 N. Allegheny St. 170 Woodbury Dr. 12 Gates Street Bellefonte, PA 13823 Amherst, NY 14226 Utica, NY 13502 Susan J. Geissler J. Lipp Dexter Benedict Susan Geissler Studios 588 Ridge Road 1554 Baker Rd. Two Buffalo Avenue, S-8 Ontario, NY 14519 Penn Yan, NY 14527 Niagara Falls, NY 14303 George Hrycun Joe Mannino Peter Calaboyias 5095 Wadsworth Hill Rd. Carnegie Mellon University 5925 Alder St. Scio, NY 14880 5000 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15232 Pittsburgh, PA 15213 Bill Secunda Fran Myers Sally McCorkle 160 Portman Road Bayfront Nato Arts Center Penn State University Butler, PA 16002 319 Chestnut St. 210 Patterson Bldg. Erie, PA 16507 University Park, PA 16802 Steven E. Ochs Mark K. Warawick Attn: Nancy Southern Arkansas University 779 Carlisle Road Art Research and Technology P. O. Box 1249 Biglerville, PA 17307 350 Industry Drive Magnolia, AR 17153 Lancaster, PA 17603 William Lasansky Eleanor Pickard Chris Hayes 910 Schoolhouse Lane 750 Jefferson Street Painted Bride Art Center Lewisburg, PA 17837 Lehighton, PA 18235 230 Vine St. Philadelphia, PA 19106 AM Weaver Ray King Painted Bride Art Center Ray King Studio, Ltd. Ray King Studio, Ltd. 230 Vine St. 835 North 3rd Street 835 N. 3rd St. Philadelphia, PA 19106 Philadelphia, PA 19123 Philadelphia, PA 19123 Diane Gingold George McMonigle James Lloyd Artsouth Inc. 1103 Overlook Dr. Sculpture Lightsource 4401 Cresson St. Coatesville, PA 19320 1330 Walton Road Philadelphia, PA 19127 Blue Bell, PA 19422 Roy Wilson Anna Washington Project for the Arts Robert Sanabria P. O. Box 156, 4006 Butler Pike 2023 Massachusetts Ave NW 18163 Canby Road Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462 Washington, DC 20036 Leesburg, VA 20175 Barton Rubenstein Robert Julio Bessin Steven Weitzman 4003 Underwood St. 54 Second St. 8527 Sligo Creek Parkway Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Newport, RI 20840 Takoma Park, MD 20912 Nicole Fall Barry Johnston Mary Anne E. Mears 15327 York Rd. 2923 Pickwick Rd 903 Poplar Hill Road Sparks, MD 21152 Baltimore, MD 21207 Baltimore, MD 21210 James Von Minor Lisa Kaslow William F. Duffy 3508 Poole St. 2313 15 Essex St. 2220 East Fairmount Ave. Baltimore, MD 21211 Baltimore, MD 21224 Baltimore, MD 21231 Paul Rhymer Carol Shireena Sakai Katherine T. Freshley 3718 Kanawha Ave. P.O. Box 3324 Arlington Arts Center Point of Rocks, MD 21777 Falls Church, VA 22043 3550 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA 22201 Colin Wilkshire Helena Davis Cathy Paine 6120 Hillview Ave. Artspace Mixed Media Alexandria, VA 22310 2 1/2 North 18th St. 1505 Carlisle Ave. Richmond, VA 23219 Richmond, VA 23231 Julio Teich David H. Turner Darcy Meeker 4600 Waverly Ave. PO Box 128 3452 Spur St. Richmond, VA 23231 Onley, VA 23418 Blacksburg, VA 24060 Adam Curtis Dick Rymill Rock Kershaw P. O. Box 1894 105 Magnolia Drive Artspace Inc. Jamestown, NC 27282 Randleman, NC 27317 P. O. Box 27331 Raleigh, NC 27611 Roger Martin Jon Hair Carl Billingsley PO Box 755 Jon Hair Studio of Fine Art 522 First Street Albemarle, NC 28001 20000 Norman Colony Road Ayden, NC 28513 Cornelius, NC 28031 Joey Manson George Nock Gregory Johnson 599 Silver Creek Rd. 1025 Nine North Drive, Ste. H 7235 Sweetgrass Court Central, SC 29630 Alpharetta, GA 30004 Cumming, GA 30041 Steve Miller B.J. Coughlin Nnamdi Okonkwo 2140 Cornerstone Lane 3994 Columns Dr. 507 Ginger Cake Road Marietta, GA 30064 Marietta , GA 30067 Fayetteville, GA 30214 Maria Artemis Doug Makemson P.M. Goulding 675 Drewry St. #9 1307 Tal Phillips Rd. 1800 Timothy Road Atlanta, GA 30306 Nicholson, GA 30565 Athens, GA 30606 Susie Chisholm Margery Torrey Andrew Gamache 10 Commodore Ct PO Box 1194 1959 Menger Circle Savannah, GA 31410 Pine Mountain, GA 31822 South Dayton, FL 32119 Cynthia Spiriti Paul Baliker W. Stanley Proctor P.O. Box 706 5928 N Ocean Shore Blvd Eliza Road Studio Gallery Flagler Beach, FL 32136 Palm Coast , FL 32137 3161-2 Eliza Road Tallahassee, FL 32308 Michael Jernigan Kim Hathis Stephen Perkins 803 Middlebrooks Cir 1785 Walnut Ave. 510 3rd Ave. Tallahassee, FL 32312 Winter Park, FL 32789 Melbourne Beach, FL 32951 John Henry Nessim Maman Bakehouse Art Complex Adamar Fine Arts Adamar Fine Arts 561 NW 32nd St. 177 NE 39th St. 177 NE 39th St. Miami, FL 33137 Miami, FL 33137 Miami, FL 33137 Rafael Consuegra Barbara Neijna Teresa Woodall 4866 SW 75th Street 4268 SW 73rd Avenue 1960 SW 56th Ave. Miami, FL 33155 Miami, FL 33155 Plantation, FL 33317 Lyn Goldman Raymond Karpuska Esther Wertheimer 2730 NW 1st Ave.
Recommended publications
  • Discovery Guide
    THE CITY OF WINTER PARK on the green2018-2019 Welcome! The Winter Park Public Art Advisory Board is proud to display six large-scale sculptures by David Hayes (1931-2013). His polychrome abstract sculptures reference nature, and are presented to ignite the imagination with their color and sense of movement, even as they remain stationary. The sculptor, like so many artists, wanted his viewers to come to their own interpretations of his work. As Hayes was quoted as saying, “The perennial question is: What’s it supposed to be? And I always answer: It’s whatever you interpret it to be…it’s based on imagination – my imagination and the viewer’s imagination.” Looking closely, viewers may see allusions to leaves or trees, but the ironical juxtaposition of steel and natural forms proves provocative. Another contradictory aspect is that even though nature is the inspiration, primary colors do not appear in nature as they do in the sculptures. These forms are bright and bold to provide visual delight. In 1953, Hayes received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. In 1955, he received a Master of Fine Arts degree from Indiana University, Bloomington, where he studied with David Smith. Hayes had some 400 exhibitions and is included in over 100 institutional collections, including those of the Museum of Modern Art and Guggenheim Museum in New York. Wave What color is water? Has it ever seemed orange or yellow? What time of day did this happen? What color is it when it breaks over your head? How does it feel? It’s exciting, isn’t it? Grasshopper What color is a grasshopper? How does it camouflage itself? Why? How does it move? It hops of course! What kind of legs are required for hopping? Look quickly – this grasshopper might just hop away! Hanging Sculpture #40 Look up in the tree! There’s a surprise.
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  • MCC Continuing Education Spring 2021 Personal Development And
    MANCHESTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE SPRING 2021 Continuing Education and PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT AND ENRICHMENT Workforce Development Non-Credit Courses: January-May ART AND CRAFTS A Guided Tour of the David Hayes Sculpture Fields in Coventry (Hybrid) David Hayes, a Manchester, Connecticut native, was a world-class sculptor and his works are on display in art museums across the country, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York. After earning an MFA from Indiana University and receiving a post-graduate Fulbright Scholarship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, he and his young family moved to Paris, where they lived for more than a decade and where Hayes studied and worked with the famous sculptor, Alexander Calder. When the family returned to the states in the 1970s, they moved into an old farmhouse in Coventry, the place where Hayes began to create his Sculpture Fields. You can sample the art online by Googling “David Hayes Sculpture Fields.” The first se sion of the course will discuss the life and work of Hayes through an online lecture, using WebEx. Students must have a webcam and microphone on their computer or device. The instructor will contact students with further instructions one to three NON-CREDIT PROGRAMS business days prior to class. The second session will meet at the David Hayes Sculpture Fields, 905 South Street, Coventry; the instructor will provide General Information .................. [email protected] directions. Students should wear appropriate boots or shoes for walking in damp grass and consider using tick protection. Due to COVID-19 guidelines, Director, mask wearing and social distancing will be required.
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  • Coventry Sculptor Created Rich Legacy of Artwork
    Vol. XXX — No. 3 — 2018 With cutting torches and arc welders Coventry sculptor created rich legacy of artwork rom the 1950s until his death in F 2013, a Connecticut Irishman used the tools of ordinary craftsmen — cutting torches and arc welders — to create ex- traordinary artwork that today is displayed throughout the nation and abroad. Fashioned from heavy steel, the sculp- tures of David Hayes are on display — to name just a few of many places — at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City; National Museum of American Art in Wash- ington, D.C.; Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburg; Dartmouth College, N.H.; Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, Mass., Hartford Public Library; and on the campus of his alma mater, Notre Dame University. Entire city of Hayes creations In 2013, almost as if in a parting tribute to his contribution to the world of art, Dothan, Ala., sponsored a yearlong and The grandson of immigrants from County Cork and son of a father who was a gridiron star citywide outdoor exposition of Hayes sculp- for Notre Dame’s Fighting Irish, David Hayes, shown at work and with one of his sculptures, tures. “The 20 works,” explained the direc- won national and international honors for the artwork he fashioned out of industrial steel. tor of the Dothan Wiregrass Museum of Art, one of the sponsors of the event, “have been citywide exhibit, described the sculptor and giving each piece, no matter its size or pal- installed across the community. Located in his work: “A master of his media, Hayes’ ette, a bold presence in the community …” public parks and gardens, college campuses sculptures, unique in color, size and compo- Dothan is not the only city to have bene- and in front of municipal buildings, all are sition, stand tall and proud around fited from Hayes’ imagination.
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  • Housatonic Museum of Art Presents David Hayes: Modern Master of American Abstraction
    DAVID HAYES: Modern Master of American Abstraction at the Housatonic Museum of Art Housatonic Museum of Art Presents David Hayes: Modern Master of American Abstraction December 3, 2014 to February 8, 2015 HOUSATONIC MUSEUM OF ART 900 Lafayette Boulevard, Bridgeport, Connecticut www.housatonicmuseum.org Photography by Paul Mutino Exhibition organized by Robbin Zella, Director 1 Housatonic Museum of Art hosts David Hayes: Modern Master of American Abstraction in celebration of this important Connecticut sculptor whose career spanned six decades. The drawings and maquettes on view here are studies for his monumental sculptures and include the biomorphic and geometric forms that comprise his signature style. Born in Hartford, he maintained a home and studio in Coventry, CT where dozens of his sculptures are situated throughout fifty-plus acres of bucolic farm and woodlands. The influence of his mentor David Smith and his friend Alexander Calder are visible in the playful welded steel polychrome works on display in the gallery. Hayes drew his inspiration from nature, translating delicate foliage into lyrical, brightly painted industrial strength sculptures. Robbin Zella 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 11 12 DAVID HAYES BIOGRAPHY AND LISTING OF SOLO EXHIBITIONS 1931 Born in Hartford, Connecticut. Lived in Coventry, 1973 Juror, Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute; Utica, New York – Connecticut. Annual Exhibition 1949–1953 University of Notre Dame; Notre Dame, Indiana, A.B. Illustrated Varmint Q by Charles Boer; Chicago: Swallow 1953–1955 Indiana University;
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  • Dad's Brochure 99-B-4
    The Sculpture of David Hayes Leaf Figure 64½" × 68" × 51½" 1975 Semi Screen 91" × 58" × 43" 1987 Horned Field Figure 1992 73" × 42" × 44" Painted Metal Relief #9 1984 38½" × 26" × 2" Armored Animal 1985 41" × 40" × 32" Vertical Diamond #10 1983 92" × 24" × 24" Gladiator 74" × 53" × 104" 1989 Inchworm 55" × 71" × 83" 1971 Inchworm #2 81" × 36" × 75" 1989 Humpback 64½" × 68" × 51½" 1987 Cygne 96" × 90½" × 97" 1991 Screen Sculpture #48 1993 Screen Sculpture #59 1994 Vertical Motif #5 1976 95½" × 66½" × 45½" 78" × 81" × 29" 115" × 35" × 43" Model for Sculpture 1987 Screen Sculpture #83 73" × 58" × 34" 1997 Model for Sculpture 1990 Screen Sculpture #26 121" × 71" × 36" 1987 DAVID HAYES David Hayes was born in Hartford, Connecticut and received an A.B. degree from the University of Notre Dame in 1953, and a M.F.A. degree from Indiana University in 1955 where he studied with David Smith. He has received a post-doctoral Fulbright award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a grant from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. He has been appointed Visiting Artist at the Carpenter Art Center, Harvard University, and has represented the United States at the Forma Viva sculpture symposium in Portoroz, Yugoslavia. He has served three years on the National Screening Committee for the Fulbright-Hays awards in sculpture and was the subject of documentary films in 1991 and 1998 on Connecticut Public Television. He has had 93 one-man shows and is included in the collections of over 60 major museums. He resides in Coventry, Connecticut. PUBLIC COLLECTIONS Museum of Modern Art, New York Everson Museum of Art; Syracuse, Hunter Museum of Art; Chattanooga, Solomon R.
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  • Third Annual Teacher Leader Fellowship Program Institute TEACHER LEADERS AS ENABLERS of CREATIVITY, COLLABORATION, and INNOVATION in THEIR CLASSROOMS and BEYOND
    Third Annual Teacher Leader Fellowship Program Institute TEACHER LEADERS AS ENABLERS OF CREATIVITY, COLLABORATION, AND INNOVATION IN THEIR CLASSROOMS AND BEYOND Monday, May 20, 2019 Central Connecticut State University Sponsored by Central Connecticut State University in partnership with Connecticut Education Association, American Federation of Teachers–CT, and Duke TeachHouse. Collaboration at Bristol Eastern High School PROGRAM 8:00 – 8:15am ��������������Registration & Refreshments – Alumni Hall 8:15 - 8:45am �������������� Welcome & Opening Remarks – Dr� Betty J� Sternberg, Moderator • Welcome – Dr� Zulma R� Toro, CCSU President • Purpose and Outcomes of Institute and Teacher Leader Fellowship Program Dr� Betty J� Sternberg, Commissioner Emerita & Director, Teacher Leader Fellowship Program at CCSU • The Teacher Perspective – Dr� Tina Manus, English Teacher & Department Head, Bullard Havens Technical High School, Bridgeport • The Administrator Perspective Ms� Sarhanna K� Smith, Principal, Read School, PreK-8, Bridgeport Ms� Fran Rabinowitz, Executive Director, CT Association of Public School Superintendents • The State Department of Education Perspective – Dr� Dianna R� Wentzell, Interim Commissioner of Education • The Importance of Teacher Leaders Mr� Donald E� Williams, Jr�, Executive Director, Connecticut Education Association Mr� David Hayes, Vice President, American Federation of Teachers, Connecticut • Introduction of Dr. Andy Hargreaves – Dr� Betty J� Sternberg 8:45 - 9:30 am �������������Dr� Andy Hargreaves, Supporting Teacher
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  • Season 2010 Season 2010-2011
    Season 20102010----20112011 The Philadelphia Orchestra Thursday, January 6, at 8:00 Friday, January 77,, at 2:00 Saturday, January 88,, at 8:00 Sunday, January 99,, at 2:00 Yannick NézetNézet----SéguinSéguin Conductor Lucy Crowe Soprano Birgit Remmert Mezzo-soprano James Taylor Tenor Andrew FosterFoster----WilliamsWilliams Bass-baritone The Philadelphia Singers Chorale David Hayes Music Director Debussy Nocturnes I. Clouds II. Festivals III. Sirens Intermission Mozart/completed Süssmayr Requiem, K. 626 I. Introitus: Requiem II. Kyrie III. Sequentia 1. Dies irae 2. Tuba mirum 3. Rex tremendae 4. Recordare 5. Confutatis 6. Lacrimosa IV. Offertorium 1. Domine Jesu 2. Hostias V. Sanctus VI. Benedictus VII. Agnus Dei VIII. Communio: Lux aeterna This program runs approximately 1 hour, 45 minutes. The January 6 concert is sponsored by Medcomp. The January 8 concert is sponsored by Ballard Spahr LLP. Since his European conducting debut in 2004, Yannick Nézet-Séguin has become one of the most sought-after conductors on today’s international classical music scene, widely praised by audiences, critics, and artists alike for his musicianship, dedication, and charisma. A native of Montreal, he made his Philadelphia Orchestra debut in 2008 and last June was named the Orchestra’s next music director, a post he takes up with the 2012-13 season. Artistic director and principal conductor of Montreal’s Orchestre Métropolitain since 2000, he became music director of the Rotterdam Philharmonic and principal guest conductor of the London Philharmonic in 2008. Recent engagements have included concerts with the Vienna and Los Angeles philharmonics, the Boston Symphony, the Dresden Staatskapelle, the Orchestre National de France and, earlier this month, a tour with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and his Berlin Philharmonic debut.
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  • Hartwood-RFQ.Pdf
    Request for Qualifications for An Outdoor Sculpture Commission at Hartwood Acres Park Release date: Friday, October 30, 2020 Allegheny County Parks Foundation in Partnership with Allegheny County Budget: $100,000 Deadline: December 21, 2020 at 4:00 PM EST SUMMARY The Allegheny Parks Foundation in partnership with Allegheny County is soliciting proposals from individual artists or an artist team to install sculptural work outside at Hartwood Acres, one of the nine county parks. The artist or artist team will work in collaboration with the Allegheny County Parks Foundation to coordinate the design, fabrication and installation of the new artwork. The budget for this project is $100,000. PROJECT DESCRIPTION The Allegheny County Parks Foundation strengthens the health and vibrancy of the community by improving, conserving and restoring the nine parks in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Working in partnership with Allegheny County, the Parks Foundation brings together ideas, leadership and resources to make the parks more sustainable and enjoyable for all. Originally designed as a country estate for an equestrian family, Hartwood Acres Park channels its opulent past in 629 acres of beauty. The original bridle trails still serve runners, bikers and cross-country skiers today. The park is well-known for its popular outdoor entertainment, including free summer concerts at the amphitheater. The newest treasure is the reimagined Hartwood Acres Sculpture Garden, an outdoor exhibition space for public art. Eleven sculptures were gifted to Hartwood Acres Park in the 1980s, when it was envisioned as an arts and culture park. A twelfth sculpture was added years later and another is on loan from the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh.
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  • David Hayes, the Artist’S Son, Who Made This Exhibition Possible
    ILLUSTRATED, BUT NOT ON VIEW SECOND FLOOR ATRIUM Study for Griffon, #3, 1988 Maquette for Griffon, 1988 gouache and ink on paper painted steel Gift of the artist Gift of the artist 1989.043 1989.036 The Snite Museum of Art is deeply grateful to Sir David Hayes, the artist’s son, who made this exhibition possible. Snite Museum of Art UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME SCULPTURE MAY 31 to AUGUST 31, 2013 This exhibition is organized in memory of Notre Dame alum David Hayes ‘53, who died in April 2013, at the age of 82 (b. 1931). After graduating from Notre Dame, Hayes undertook graduate work at Indiana University, Bloomington, where he studied with American sculptor David Smith and graduated with a MFA in 1955. Throughout an artistic career that spanned six decades, he created graceful sculptures abstracted from organic forms encountered in his daily life. For example, the monumental Griffon sculpture located in front of the Snite Museum of Art is based on leaves. His sculptures have affinities to Alexander Calder’s playful stabiles (he met Calder in Paris) and to the shapes and colors of Matisse’s late paper cutouts. His works are firmly rooted in Modern artists’ interests in industrial materials and in commercial fabrication processes. Hayes’ work has been seen in hundreds of exhibitions in the United States, France, and the Nether­ lands. His sculptures are in the collections of more than 100 museums, including The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Connecticut; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Guggenheim Museum, New York; the Detroit Institute of the Arts; and the Snite Museum of Art.
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  • David Hayes, Special Assistant to President Biden for Climate Policy April 2, 2021 | 10-11 AM PT
    Communities, Climate Action, and New U.S. Leadership: A conversation with David Hayes, Special Assistant to President Biden for Climate Policy April 2, 2021 | 10-11 AM PT LIVE “WHITEBOARD” NOTES Webinar Materials: ● Event Recording ● Registration Statistics ● Presenter Notes ● Facilitated Q&A ● Submitted Questions ● Zoom Chat ● Key Insights and Ideas Parking Lot Key Links ● White House Briefing Room ○ January 27 Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad ○ March 31 Fact Sheet on the American Jobs Plan ● American Society of Adaptation Professionals (ASAP) ○ Join ○ ASAP's Policy Practice Group ● Local Government Commission (LGC) ○ California Climate Energy Collaborative (CCEC) ■ National News ■ CCEC LinkedIn Peer-to-Peer Network ○ ARCCA ○ CivicSpark Americorps Capacity Building Program ● Tribal Climate Health Project (TCHP) ○ Tribal Wellbeing Adaptation Webinar Mini-series ● Prosper Sustainably, LLC ○ Angie Hacker (LinkedIn) [email protected] Registration Statistics - 610 registrants Type of practitioner Local Government 24% Other 22% NGO supporting community climate action 21% Private company supporting community climate action 18% State Government 8% Tribal Government 4% N/A 3% Region Southwest 40% Northwest 24% Northeast 15% Southeast 9% N/A 6% Midwest 4% Great Plains 1% Alaska 1% Hawaii 0% Presenter Notes: ASAP: ASAP connects and supports adaptation professionals to innovate and just adaptation solutions in North America. TCHP: National, federally-funded capacity building program led by the pala Band of Mission Indians in partnership with Prosper Sustainably, with a focus on health, wellbeing, community engagement and data development. LGC: National organization run by and for local leaders that works in five program areas including climate change through several programs.
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  • Maestro David Hayes, Music Director
    Maestro David Hayes, Music Director David Hayes is a conductor with an unusually broad range of repertory, spanning the symphonic, oratorio/choral and operatic genres. His role as Music Director of NYChoral (New York Choral Society) complements his other roles as Music Director of the Mannes Orchestra and Staff Conductor of the Curtis Symphony Orchestra. The 2016-2017 season marks Mr. Hayes’ fifth season as NYChoral Music Director. Mr. Hayes served on the conducting staff of The Philadelphia Orchestra from 2001-2011. In May 2015, he completed twenty-three years as Music Director of the critically acclaimed professional vocal ensemble The Philadelphia Singers, which was the resident chorus of The Philadelphia Orchestra from 2000-2011. He served as Interim Director of Orchestras for Temple University during the 2014-15 season. Mr. Hayes has also served as a cover conductor for the New York Philharmonic as well as for Sir Andre Previn on the Curtis Symphony Orchestra’s 1999 European Tour with Anne-Sophie Mutter. Equally at home both orchestrally and vocally, Mr. Hayes is in demand as guest conductor with orchestras and opera companies across North America. Recent guest conducting engagements have included a production of Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore for Opera Memphis, Britten’s The Rape of Lucretia, and the East Coast premiere performances of Tan Dun’s Tea: A Mirror of Soul for the Opera Company of Philadelphia as well as a new production of Massenet’s Manon for the Curtis Opera Theatre. In addition, Mr. Hayes also conducted the 90th Anniversary gala performances of the Martha Graham Dance Company at New York City Center in April 2016.
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  • DAVID HAYES Biography
    DAVID HAYES Biography American modern master David Hayes created graceful sculptures abstracted from organic forms over an artistic career that spanned six decades. His monumental outdoor sculptures contemplate the relationship between a work of art and the environment it occupies, and show the influence of teacher David Smith and friend Alexander Calder. Born in 1931, Hayes worked for much of his life on a bucolic Connecticut farmhouse. From an early age he demonstrated unusual talent. At 20 he shifted his career from medicine to sculpture and at 30 he took his young family to Paris for study at the Louvre. At 18, Hayes left home for Indiana. He quickly graduated from Notre Dame and immediately enrolled at Indiana University to pursue his Master of Fine Arts degree. In 1954, David Smith accepted a teaching position at Indiana with Hayes in his classes. Following formal studies, he would continue to work with Smith, now his friend, at Bolton Landing. c-fineart.com [email protected] 646-594-7583 250 W 90th St, Suite 17F, New York, NY 10024 DAVID HAYES Biography From his teacher Hayes mastered an appreciation for the permanence of steel. In Indiana, both Smith and Hayes learned about forging from a local blacksmith. Smith began his Forging Series in 1955, and continued to create his revered Tanktotems. Hayes forged his own animal forms, sculptures that were quickly accepted into shows at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museum’s inaugural exhibition in 1959. Hayes received his MFA in June 1955, and spent the next two years in the Navy.
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