In 1947 Avard
was appointed dean of the newly created College
of Fine Arts at the University of Utah. He created three heroic
statues to be placed in Statuary Hall in the Capitol Building in Washington
DC - Marcus Whitman, pioneer physician of the Pacific Northwest, Esther
Morris, women's right advocate of Wyoming, and John Burke, governor
of North Dakota, Supreme Court Justice, and US Treasurer. Avard also
sculpted a monument of Daniel
C. Jackling, who developed the Utah
Copper Company. This was placed in the Utah State Capitol.
Avard also
began work on other monuments of Abraham Lincoln. He erected a heroic
bronze in New Salem Village, Illinois, another at Lincoln Square in
Chicago entitled "The Great Chicago Lincoln", and another called "Lincoln
the Friendly Neighbor" in Berwyn, Illinois. At Knox College in Galesburg,
Illinois, Avard made bronze panels commemorating the Lincoln-Douglas
debates. And finally, Avard placed four busts of Lincoln in the Ford
Theater Museum - the youth, the railsplitter, the lawyer, and the
president.
Avard did many
portraits of notable individuals from around the world. He also sculpted
the Angel Moroni which was placed atop many LDS
temples. In Manti, Utah he placed the
Mortal Moroni on the grounds of the temple.
For the Utah
Centennial, Dr. Fairbanks contructed a Pony Express which was displayed
in the parade. This sculpture depicts a young rider starting on a
fresh horse in front of an old man with the worn out horse. It is
one of the few tributes to the men who guarded the stations of the
Pony Express, many of whom lost their lives. The Pony Express for
the Utah Centennial was a temporary sculpture, made of plaster and
displayed in many parades throughout Utah until the piece eventually
deteriorated. Avard's sons have recreated this great work, and it
was place at This
is the Place State Park in Salt Lake City. Years later, William
Harrah commissioned Avard to create a "single rider" pony express
which was placed at Harrah's in Lake Tahoe and later in Reno. The
one in Lake Tahoe remains, but the one in Reno has since been moved.