Solo exhibitions of Bailey's work have been held at McGill University (Body Politics, 1994) and the Eye Level Gallery, Halifax (Making Connections Across Art Forms, 1995).[4][5] The Women's Art Resource Centre held an exhibition of her work entitled The Viewing Room in 1999. Her work was also featured in the exhibition Black Body: Race, Resistance, Response, curated by Pamela Edmonds in 2001 at Dalhousie Art Gallery in Halifax, Nova Scotia.[6]
Bailey is a co-founder of the Diasporic African Women's Art Collective (DAWA).[7] In 1989, Bailey participated as both a co-curator and an artist in the group exhibition Black Wimmin: When and Where We Enter, an exhibition organized by DAWA. It was the first exhibition in Canada to focus entirely on the work of Black women artists.[8][9] The show toured across Canada and has become a foundation for organizing efforts by Black women artists and curators.[10][11]
Bailey's work was paired with Walter Redinger's in an exhibition at the McIntosh Gallery, University of Western Ontario, in 1998.[12]
Bailey was a featured subject in the 2017 exhibition Light Grows the Tree at BAND Gallery (Black Artists' Network in Dialogue) in Toronto, which featured photographic portraits of leading Black Canadian artists, authors, curators and collectors.[13]
^Brewster, Sandra (2018). "Letters of Negro Progress". In Scott, Kitty (ed.). Theaster Gates: how to build a house museum. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. pp. 134–135. ISBN978-1-894243-93-3.