Michael Hayden (born January 15, 1943) is a Canadian artist who is noted for his artworks incorporating neon lighting. He preferred to use the term 'products' rather than artworks. [2]
Hayden was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, [3] [4] the son of a designer who moved to Toronto with his family. Hayden attended the Ontario College of Art and while there created a ten-room presentation of sights, sounds, and smells, called "Mind Excursion". [5] His best-known commission is Sky's the Limit (1987) at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago's United Airlines terminal (see photograph). [1] [6] Other prominent commissions include Arc en Ciel (1978), [7] which was formerly installed at Yorkdale subway station in Toronto, York Electric Murals at York University Libraries, [8] [9] and Quadrille (1996), [10] which is installed on a building in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Hayden's work is in the public collections of many museums, including the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; [11] and the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. [12]
Yorkdale is a subway station on Line 1 Yonge–University in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the median of the William R. Allen Road just south of Highway 401. Opened in 1978, the station is named after the nearby Yorkdale Shopping Centre, to which it is connected by an enclosed walkway.
Henry Orenstein was a Canadian artist, animator, activist, teacher, soldier and pacifist. He was best known for his contributions to the art world and for his art work - he specialized in easel paintings and murals. His work is displayed in private and public collections across Canada, most notably in the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia and the Art Gallery of Sudbury.
William Ronald Smith, known professionally as William Ronald, was an important Canadian painter, best known as the founder of the influential Canadian abstract art group Painters Eleven in 1953 and for his abstract expressionist "central image" paintings. He was the older brother of painter John Meredith (1933–2000).
Ronald York Wilson, also known as R. York Wilson, was a Canadian painter and muralist.
James Williamson Galloway Macdonald, commonly known in his professional life as Jock Macdonald, was a member of Painters Eleven, whose goal was to promote abstract art in Canada. Macdonald was a trailblazer in Canadian art from the 1930s to 1960. He was the first painter to exhibit abstract art in Vancouver, and throughout his life he championed Canadian avant-garde artists at home and abroad. His career path reflected the times: despite his commitment to his artistic practice, he earned his living as a teacher, becoming a mentor to several generations of artists.
William Brymner, was a Canadian figure and landscape painter and educator. In addition to playing a key role in the development of Impressionism in Canada, Brymner taught numerous artists who became leading figures in Canadian modern art.
André Fauteux is a Canadian artist who now lives in Toronto, Ontario. Fauteux is a sculptor known for his abstract welded steel sculpture, which is related to Geometric abstraction. His modernist sculptures are also related to the Formalist ideas associated with Clement Greenberg.
Eugenia Berlin (1905–2003) was a Russian Empire-born Canadian sculptor, painter, designer and director.
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Robert Wakeham Pilot DCL was a Canadian artist, who worked mainly in oil on canvas or on panel, and as an etcher and muralist. He is known for his ability to capture the tone and atmosphere, especially at twilight, of the landscape of Quebec. Pilot is the last of the Canadian painters considered "to lend authority to Canadian Impressionism". He also accepted commissions as a book illustrator.
Louise Robert is a Canadian painter who uses writing in her work.
Irène Legendre was a Canadian-American painter.
John Young Johnstone was a Canadian Impressionist painter, known for his paintings of life in city, town or countryside, as well as for scenes of Montreal's Chinatown.
Denyse Gadbois was a Canadian artist and professor who worked in painting, mural art and sculpture.
Jean Albert McEwen was a Canadian painter known for his lyrical abstraction.
Dorothy Cameron Bloore (1924–2000) was a Canadian art dealer, and installation artist in Toronto, Ontario. Her works can be found in the Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa and the Art Gallery of Hamilton.
Gordon Webber was a multimedia pioneer of modernism in Canada. He was also an educator.
John Martin Alfsen, known more commonly as John Alfsen was a painter, known for his portraits, figurative work and paintings of circus life.
John Wentworth Russell (1879–1959) was a Canadian painter with a wide range of subjects and media – portraits, landscapes, still life, and the nude as well as illustrations for magazines, such as Vogue. Russell’s large painting A Modern Fantasy, of a reclining female nude echoing Titian but realistically depicted and wearing a hat, caused a sensation when shown at the Canadian National Exhibition (C.N.E.) in Toronto in 1927. Although many adverse comments were published, Prime Minister Mackenzie King stated of the work: "1 saw the painting at the Ex and thought it a marvelous work.
Stanley Cosgrove was a Canadian painter, draughtsperson and muralist. His landscapes are praised for their serenity.
California artist Michael Hayden was selected to design a lighting sculpture synchronized with music and orchestrated with architecture. Hayden's solution, Sky's the Limit, uses 466 neon tubes and extends 744 feet.
Among the most ambitious examples of airport art are Michael Hayden's Sky's the Limit at Chicago's United Airlines terminal...
A spectacular display of rainbow colors is produced by neon tubes in the skylight from an electronic sculpture called "Arc en ciel" by artist Michael Hayden.