Skip to content

Amy Hauft



An unapologetic sculptor, Amy Hauft grew up on Southern California light. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in fine art from the University of California, Santa Cruz and a Master of Fine Arts in sculpture from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She lived most of her life in New York City, in addition to significant stints in Richmond, Virginia and Austin, Texas. She resettled in St. Louis in 2019.  

Hauft creates architectural-scale installations, haptic situations in which the viewer’s experience is equally palpable as physical and cognitive experiences. She has exhibited her work in museums and galleries worldwide, including the Brooklyn Museum (New York), the New Museum (New York), the International Artists’ Museum (Poland), the American Academy in Rome (Italy), and MoMA PS1 (New York), among others. She recently completed a major solo exhibition for MASS MoCA (North Adams, Massachusetts). Hauft’s honors include fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the St. Gaudens Foundation, and the Howard Foundation, as well as grants from New York’s Public Art Fund and the PEW Foundation Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative. She has been awarded residencies to work internationally, including the Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellowship in Umbria, Italy and the International Artists’ Residency Fellowship in Łódź, Poland. 

For 14 years, Hauft taught at the Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, moving from assistant to full professor. In 2004, she was appointed chair of the Department of Sculpture + Extended Media at Virginia Commonwealth University, whose graduate sculpture program was ranked first in the nation by U.S. News & World Report for her entire tenure. In 2012, Hauft was named the Leslie Waggener Professor in Sculpture at the University of Texas at Austin, where she ran the MFA in Studio Art program. In 2019, she was appointed director of the College of Art and Graduate School of Art in the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis, and established her studio in St. Louis. 


Select Articles, Chapters, and Publications

  • “Review: Tender Glass by Amy Hauft Carol Mavor,” in Conflict of Interest, 2017. Thao Votang.

  • “Anderson Gallery: 45 Years of Art on the Edge,” 2016, Ashley Kistler, ed. Published by Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.

  • “Future Anterior: an index to contemporary art’s imminent history; Amy Hauft,” in Art Papers, May/June 2010. Dinah Ryan.

  • “College Art Galleries,” in Sculpture Magazine, 2002, vol. 21, no. 8. Leslie Kaufman.

Select Exhibitions and Presentations

  • “7000,000:1 | Luna | Terra | Sol,” MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, 2022-23

  • “Decoys + Depictions,” Des Lee Gallery, St. Louis, 2019

  • “Tender Glass,” Testsite, Fluent Collaborative, Austin, TX, 2017

  • “Counter Re-Formation,” Anderson Gallery, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, 2010

Select Awards and Grants

  • 2016 — Sculpture Space Residency, Utica, NY

  • 2001 — New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Sculpture

  • 1999 — Saint-Gaudins Memorial Fellowship

News