- Marvin Hayes
-
Marvin Hayes 300px
Marvin HayesBorn September 30, 1939
Canton, MississippiNationality American Field Painting, Drawing, Printmaking Marvin Hayes is an American painter and illustrator, working primarily in egg tempera and copperplate etchings.
Contents
Early life and education
Marvin Everett Hayes was born on September 30, 1939 in Canton, Mississippi. Before he was 2, his family moved to Orange, Texas, where his father, Aubrey, was stationed with the Navy during World War II. Shortly after the war, he moved to Hamshire, Texas with his parents and older brother, Aubrey Jr. His mother, Myrtle, was a nurse.
Hayes’ artistic talent was discovered and encouraged by Juanita Martin of Saratoga, his high school English teacher, and Mr. Bennett, an accountant for the rice dryer in Hamshire, and a wonderful painter who taught Hayes how to paint and took him to the Beaumont Art League[1] for drawing classes. In 1958 Hayes graduated Hamshire-Fannett High School in Hamshire, Texas.
Hayes was athletic. In 1958 he was recruited by legendary coach Bear Bryant and received a football scholarship to Texas A&M University.[2] After only one season, he returned home to care for his sick mother and help his older brother through school. Hayes stayed out of school for a semester, then received an academic scholarship to Lamar University in 1960-63[3] and a job offer from Lamb Printing. In 1963 Hayes graduated Lamar University Magna Cum Laude, was Phi Beta Kappa, and national student editor of "Kappa Phi Magazine" (the honor fraternity for art students). From Lamar he went on scholarship to Columbia University in New York, where he was Meyer Schapiro’s assistant for three years.Artistic career
Following graduation, Hayes became an award-winning illustrator, appearing in Esquire, McCall's, Playboy, Redbook, Readers' Digest, Time, and Good Housekeeping. Encouraged by Ted Rousseau and Meyer Schapiro, he turned to fine art, working primarily in egg tempera and copperplate etchings.
Hayes won First Award in 1972 in the 22nd Annual New England Painting and Sculpture Exhibition Graphics Exhibition. The same year he had work accepted in the International Graphics Exhibition.
Hayes’ 1977 masterwork, God’s Images. The Bible: A New Vision, illustrates the Bible through 53 etchings, with text by poet-novelist James Dickey. The book sold over a hundred thousand copies and was reviewed favorably by The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Book Digest, among others. It won the National Bible Committee Award for books, presented by then-president Jimmy Carter. Hayes appeared on several television shows, including the Today Show and the Dick Cavett Show.From 1965 to 1991 Hayes lived in Wilton, Connecticut, where he took care of his ailing mother. His mother died in 1988, 15 years after his father’s death in an auto accident. When he returned to New York City, he had been honored as a humanitarian in Connecticut and in New York, among others with Wilton’s Distinguished Citizen Award and the Partners in Caring Award for Connecticut.
For more than 47 years, Hayes has been affiliated as a volunteer with the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, working in the education, drawings and prints, media, and objects conservation departments.
Hayes has given lectures, seminars and workshops at Yale, Harvard and Columbia Universities, the Rhode Island School of Design and Carnegie Institute, as well as the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Lamar University. A member of the Microsoft development team, he was an early proponent and innovator of digital imaging and an expert in video, scanning, color calibration and large format printing. He is on the Microsoft Online Research Panel, evaluating software in Bata, and new computers and hardware. He has written software programs for many years and before Microsoft Word and Word Perfect, he created the word processing programs for the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Hayes won the top award in the New England Annual Painting and Sculpture Show, The National Print Show, and the Bi-Annual Texas Tri-State Show. In 1983 he received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Lamar University, and a presidential scholarship was created in his name.
Marvin Hayes lives in New York City with his partner Frank Bara.Exhibitions (work in progress)
1985 Vatican Museums, Vatican City
1995 Presbyterian Gallery in Stamford, CT
2000 Catherine J. Smith Gallery, Appalachian State University', Boone, NC [4]
Museums exhibiting his work include the Metropolitan, Boston, Smithsonian, National Portrait Gallery, Brooklyn, Bibliothèque Nationale and New York Public Library.Collections (work in progress)
Vatican Museums, Vatican City
Dishman Art Museum, Lamar University, Beaumont, Texas
Private collectors include Louis Auchincloss, Jacqueline Onassis, David Rockefeller, Barbara Walters and Anwar Sadat.Footnotes
References
- James Dickey (text) and Marvin Hayes (53 etchings), God’s Images. The Bible: A New Vision, Birmingham, Alabama: Oxmoor House, 1977, ISBN 0848704797
- The biblical etchings of Marvin Hayes A catalog of the exhibition held at the FAR Gallery, New York City, November 22, 1976
- GraceAnne DeCandido: God’s images: The Bible – A New Vision, Library Journal 103 (January 15, 1978), p. 154
- Richard Calhoun and Robert Hill: James Dickey, Boston 1983, pp. 107–8
- Jane Martin-Bowers: Jericho and God’s Images: The Old Dickey Theme, in: The Imagination as Glory, ed. Weigl and Hummer, pp. 143–51
- Gordon Van Ness (Ed.): The one voice of James Dickey: His Letters and Life, 1970-1997. With commentary by Gordon Van Ness. University of Missouri Press, Columbia, Missouri 2005, pp. 40–41
- Louise Wood: Images of Marvin Hayes, Cardinal Cadence 15 December 2005, http://www.lamar.edu/newsevents/cc/461_3807.html
External links
- Marvin Hayes website: [marvinhayes.net]
- Marvin Hayes at www.journaled.com [5]
Categories:- American artists
- American painters
- American printmakers
- Contemporary painters
- 1939 births
- Portrait artists
- Living people
- Harvard University people
- Columbia University people
- Rhode Island School of Design
- Lamar University alumni
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.