Artist/instructor Gail McDaniel (second from left) presents certificates of appreciation to Jon and Jim Hager of The Hager Twins (far left, far right) during a lunch and press conference at McDaniel's Franklin studio on Monday, Dec 3. Celebrating with McDaniel and The Hager Twins are Tennessee state sen. Jack Johnson (third from left) and award co-founder Ken McDaniel (fourth from left).

Click image to enlarge



Artist/instructor Gail McDaniel (second from left) presents certificates of appreciation to Jon and Jim Hager of The Hager Twins (far left, far right) during a lunch and press conference at McDaniel's Franklin studio on Monday, Dec 3. The country comedians/recording artists have been named honorary co-chairs of the Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel Award, a program that provides funds for arts education in Williamson and Davidson county public schools.

The Hager Twins will work with McDaniel to raise much-needed funds through individual, business and foundation donations and the eighth annual Chase Away the Blahs Party, a live auction and "artistic" potluck lunch on Jan 19, 2008. The PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank will issue award grants to art teachers in February 2008. Since founding the award in 2000, McDaniel has helped raisemore than $36,000 for arts education.

Celebrating with McDaniel and The Hager Twins are Tennessee state sen. Jack Johnson (third from left) and award co-founder Ken McDaniel (fourth from left).

For more information about the Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel Award, call (615) 599-5115, send an email to gail@gailmcdanielart.com or visit http://www.gailmcdanielart.com.

Above Article is courtesy of
Williamson Herald, Tennessee

 



Attending the art grants tea party were Barbara Bullard, Lucy Randles, Linda Owens, Laurie Poole, Suzanne Warner, Paulette Janaway, Carol Crittenden, Ted Edinger, Linda Anderson, Colette Chambers, Becky Sharber, Gail Mcdaniel, Daryl Wilkinson, Maggie Tucker, Ceci Sachs, Beth Perthel, Heather McHugh and Valerie Lamb-Steece.

Click image to enlarge


Country art teachers benefit from fundraiser

FRANKLIN — A local couple has raised about $17,000 for art teachers in Williamson and Davidson counties.

Ken and Gail McDaniel brought in the money through their fundraiser, The Chase-Away-the-Blahs party, so named to bring about cheer during the dreary month of January.

Art teachers from Williamson County Schools and Franklin Special School District received a portion of the money, about $11,000, Wednesday during a ceremony and tea party at the McDaniels' home. The money is to be used for art supplies in the classroom.

This the eighth year the McDaniels have conducted the event. To date, the couple and their friends have raised about $53,000.

Over the years, local celebrities, students and supporters have rallied behind the McDaniels, who believe teaching art is integral to a child's education.

"If young minds don't get that creativity early on, they miss out on that creative spark later," said Gail McDaniel, a well-known watercolorist who teaches art. "They are our future. We need to take care of them now."

In FSSD, three art teachers received grants: Linda Owens of Freedom Middle School, $1,800; Colette Chambers of Franklin Elementary School, $1,200; and Kelly Selfe of Moore Elementary School, $1,288.

In the county, seven teachers received grants: Heather McHugh of Scales Elementary School, $575; Barbara Bullard of Brentwood High School, $200; Maggie Tucker of Brentwood Middle School, $317.50; Beth Perthel of Edmondson Elementary School, $650; Patricia Hickman of Longview Elementary School, $250; Ceci Sachs of Independence High School, $500; and Valerie Lamb-Steece of College Grove Elementary School, $750.

The remainder of the money will go toward the purchase of visual arts supplies for the PENCIL Foundation, a school-supply program for Nashville teachers.

Contact Maria Giordano at 771-5425 or mgiordano@tennessean.com.

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean, Williamson A.M.

 



International student Anna Varona gets advice from watercolor teacher Gail Mcdaniel during her first session this week at a class in Brentwood. Verona will be here the entire week studying with Mcdaniel, including a watercolor at O'More College in Franklin.

Click image to enlarge



By KAREN EMERSON-McPEAK

   It's been a few months since Anna Varona of the Phillippeans searched the Web for Tennessee artists and found Gail Mcdaniel. Since then she's been active making plans to come to Franklin to study with her.
   "I know when I went to her Web site that she would be a good teacher, not one who would just say 'watch me paint,'" Varona said tuesday afetr her first class with Mcdaniel.
   Saturday, July 24, Mcdaniel will share her unique appraoch to artistry with members of the community during a one-day class at O'More College of Design, 423 S. Margin St. in Franklin. Varona will also be part of that class.
   Mcdaniel's remarkable teaching techniques have enabled students to embrace their own talents for many years and after one class, Varona felt she had made a good choice in coming to Franklin.
   Varona's week will consist of class after class after class - some group, some one-on-one. Mcdaniel teaches three classes at Brentwood United Methodist Church. Sessions usually last for eight weeks and run most of the year.
   "I rent space from the church," Mcdaniel said. "The Methodists just feel that the church space should be used."
   Anyone can attend the classes, no matter what faith.
   Varona has studied art for some time, but it was only a few years ago that she really had to paint and study what she loves.
   

   "My mother, being a business woman, advised me to try for liberal arts and commerce after high school. I did, but also applied at the University of Santo Tomas for fine arts."Varona ended up at De La Salle University because her mother insisted that she be practical.
      "I kept on hearing, 'You're not going to make any money with art.' After graduating, my mother then allowed me to study fine arts, but only on certain conditions, which were that it be an all-girls school abd that it would be interior design because there would be money in it.
   "I finshed the course, got married to my first husband and since then my art took a backseat to my children and my tumultuous married life."
   Finally though, Varona has taken up her brushes again and with encouragement from her painting group, hopes to find her niche.
   As a mother of six, she's found that she has to follow a schedule to allow for her painting time. She has thoughts of becoming a teacher herself, but for now is busy preparing for a show this December with her four painting companions.
    "You need people to encourage you," Varona said.
   Mcdaniel agrees. "Some of my students will take off for a session to paint on their own but find they don't do anything. If they don't paint for a while they lose some of what they've learned."

 According to Mcdaniel, you can never learn enough. In fact, she too takes a couple of workshops a year.
   "There's always some new technique or product to learn about," she said.
   Mcdaniel shares her many years of experience with students of all artistic skill levels in both private lessons and weekly group clesses held in Brentwood and at Cheekwood's Fine Art Institute in Nashville.
  For more information about her classes, call 599-5115 or visit www.gailmcdanielart.com.

Staff Reporter Karen Emerson-McPeak can be contacted on karen@reviewappeal.com.



Watercolor Workshop


Saturday July 24 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. at O'More College of Design

The cost of this workshop is $60 and includes a light lunch and refreshments. A suggested supply list will be provided prior to the event. Attendees will have the opportunity to contact instructor Gail Mcdaniel in order to discuss supplies they may need for the workshop. Spaces in this workshop are still available and reservations are requested. Please contact Allison Payne at 794-4254, ext. 36 or apayne@omorecollege.edu to reserve your space today.


 

Above Article is courtesy of
Williamson County Review Appeal

 




This parrot, painted by student Thayer Wine, exemplifies the intense colors the students experienced during their trip to Guatemala.

Click image to enlarge



   Painted during and after a 10-day trip to Guatemala led by local artist and instructor Gail McDaniel, the watercolors on display at CharacterEyes Boutique in Franklin through Oct 31 capture the rich biodiversity of the vibrant Central American republic.

    “We were there to paint a rainbow” enthused McDaniel, alluding to the magnificently colored plumed birds of Guatemala and the bright, multi-hued clothing worn by many of its inhabitants.

    For four days, the painters were head-quartered at a hotel on the shore of world famous Lake Atitlan, McDaniel went on to say, explaining that the word “Atitlan” is Mayan for “the place where the rainbow gets its colors.”

    Featured alongside McDaniel’s work in the show, which doubles as a benefit for Bridges of Williamson County, the county’s only domestic violence shelter, are the paintings of her students Laura Hampton, Randy Love, Lisa Syler and former Tennessean staffer Thayer Wine.

   McDaniel is no stranger to painting in far-flung and breathtaking settings, be it on the Pacific Rim in Western Canada or in the South of France.

    The latter, of course, is home to the French Impressionists, one of the primary influences on McDaniel’s watercolors.  “Like them, I am trying to capture a moment in time as I put watercolor to paper,” she said of the Impressionists.

    Titled Guatemala Through Artists’ Eyes, the show featuring McDaniel at CharacterEyes Boutique  in Franklin (407 Church St.) is open 8:30 a.m. – 5.30 p.m. Monday – Friday and 11 a.m. – 3 p.m. Saturday.  For more information about the exhibition, call 599-1800.  To view McDaniel’s work, visit www.gailmcdanielart.com

BY BILL FRISKICS-WARREN, STAFF WRITER

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean Arts & Entertainment

 




Market by Gail McDaniel is featured in Guatemala Through Artists' Eyes, on view at CharacterEYES Boutique in Franklin through Oct. 31.

Click image to enlarge




Guatemala Through Artist Eyes:
Works by Gail McDaniel, Laura Hampton, Lisa Syler, Randy Love and Thayer Wine and will be on view through Oct 31.  A portion of proceeds benefit BRIDGES of Williamson County.  8.30 a.m. – 5.30 p.m.  Oct 20 – 24; 11a.m. – 3 p.m.  Oct 25; CharacterEYES, 407 Church St., Franklin, 599-1800

   

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean Arts & Entertainment

 



Country comedians / recording artists Jon Hager (center) and Jim Hager cut up with visual artist gail McDaniel during the seventh annual Chase Away The Blahs Party in Franklin. The Hager Twins donated Hee Haw memorabilia for the live auction.

Click image to enlarge



   With a little help from the Hager Twins and other entertainers, artist/instructor gail McDaniel has raised $18,127 for arts education in Middle Tennessee.
   The Franklin watercolorist will present $11,859 in award grants to 14 art teachers of Williamson and Davidson county public schools during an awards reception at her Franklin studio on February 21 at 4:30 p.m.
    The remaining $6,268 will be donated to the PENCIL Foundation’s LP PENCIL Box, a store that provides free educational supplies to area schools.

Students and friends of gail McDaniel Award grants will be issued through the PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank. The funds were raised through individual business and foundation donations and seventh annual Chase Away the Blahs Party, a live auction and “artistic” potluck lunch on January 27. More than 100 items were donated for the auction.

Above Article is courtesy of
Nashville Today

 



Artist/instructor Gail McDaniel (first from left) presents award grants to art teachers of Williamson County Schools during an awards reception at her Franklin, Tenn. Studio on Feb. 21.  Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel Award grants totaling $11,859 were issued through the PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank to Williamson and Davidson county public schools.  Award recipients and/or officials attending the celebration were, from left, Jennifer Schuil of Sunset Middle; Naomi Norman of Liberty Elementary; Linda Owens of Freedom Middle; Susan Duncan of Nolensville Elementary; Cassie Stephens of Johnson Elementary; Brad LeDuc of Ravenwood High; Dr. Becky Sharber, Director of Williamson County Schools; Sharon Byers of Freedom Intermediate; and Barbara Bullard of Brentwood High.

Click image to enlarge



   With a little help from The Hager Twins and other entertainers, artist/instructor Gail McDaniel has raised a record $18,127 for arts education in Middle Tennessee.
  The Franklin watercolorist presented $11,289 in award grants to 14 art teachers of Williamson and Davidson county public schools during an awards reception at her Franklin studio on Feb. 21.
  The remaining $6,838 will be donated to the PENCIL Foundation’s LP PENCIL Box, a store that provides free educational supplied to area schools.
  Students and friends of Gail McDaniel Award grants will be issued through the PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank.  The funds were raised through individual, business and foundation donations and the seventh annual Chase Away the Blahs Party, a live auction and “artistic” potluck lunch on Jan 27.  More than 100 items were donated for the auction, including Hee Haw memorabilia from country comedians/recording artists The Hager Twins; week-long time share vacations at premier international resorts; a two-night stay at Waterfall House in Monteagle; an all-tuition-paid, one-day watercolour painting workshop led by McDaniel; a lunch with Titans radio play-by-play announcer Mike Keith, appearances by acclaimed songwriters/musicians Wayne Jackson and Kenny Durham; and a wide range of arts supplies, equipment and other items.
   “We raised $11,000 more than we did last year – we are just overwhelmed” said McDaniel, who

is already planning next year’s event.  “Proceeds from the live auction, along with cash donations, will be used by schools to purchase much needed visual art supplies.  Many schools in our area face fiscal challenges, which often limit available funding for arts education.  This is a wonderful way for arts supporters to invest in the future of artists of America.”
    McDaniel noted that over $35,000 has been raised for arts education since the awards started in 2000.
  Receiving award grants are Susan Duncan, Nolensville Elementrary, $500; Katy Lane, Pinewood Elementary, $750; Barbara Bullard, Brentwood High, $325; Jennifer Schuil, Sunset Middle, $1,395; Brad LeDuc, Ravenwood High, $487.73; Cassie Stephens, Johnson Elementary, $750; Linda Owens, Freedom Middle, $1,600; Kelly Selfe, Moore Elementary, $500; Emily Wiles, Poplar Grove Middle, $570; Naomi Norman, Liberty Elementary, $2,426.82; Sharon Byers, Freedom Intermediate, $1,300; Leigh Siegfried, Dalewood Middle School, $500; Linda Anderson, Glencliff High, $503.85; and Laurie Poole, Nashville School of the Arts, $250.
    LP PENCIL Box, a school supply store for educators, provides learning materials for impoverished students in Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools.  Supplies are solicited from businesses
  

organizations and individuals for distribution throughout the year.  Art teachers will be able to shop free of charge for visual art supplies on designated days and times.
   “The generous grant PENCIL receives from the Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel arts program will allow us to earmark funds to purchase much-needed art supplies,” said Laura Ross, finance/human resources director for the items are in high demand, and our supplies are often times small in comparison to the need.  We are also excited about partnering this summer with the Community Resource Center in a joint venture called materials for the Arts.  We will be collaborating with CRC in a program specifically designed to help meet the specific supply needs for our art teachers.”
   “We could not have done this without the support of the PENCIL Foundation of Nashville and BanCorpSouth of Brentwood,” McDaniel added.  “Special thanks to all the many supporters who made this possible.  This means so much to art teachers and their students.”

For more information about the Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel Award grants or to make a donation, call (615) 599-5115, send an e-mail to gail@gailmcdanielart.com, or visit www.gailmcdanielart.com.



Above Article is courtesy of
Williamson Herald, Tennessee

 




Front row from left: Maggie Tucker of Brentwood Middle, $500; and Niomi Norman of Liberty Elementary, $500. Second row from left: Freedom Intermediate principple and special guest Sean Impeartrice; Cassie Stephens of Johnson Elementary, $500; Kelly Selfe of Moore Elementary, $1,124.80; Sharon Byers of Freedom Intermediate, $571; Linda Owens of Freedom Middle, $1,000, Katy Lane of Pinewood Heights Elementary, $500; and LouiseBraswell of Westwood Elementary, $500.


"Our goal this year was to raise $4,000, and we exceeded our goal by more than $3,000. Since 2001, we've raised more than $17,000 to benefit arts education. This means so much to art teachers and their students."
- Gail Mcdaniel


   Artist/Instructor Gail McDaniel will present a record $7,138.50 in award grants to the visual arts programs of Davidson and Williamson County public schools during an awards reception at her Franklin, Tenn., studio on Feb. 22.
   Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel Award grants will be issued through the PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank. The funds were raised during the sixth annual Chase Away the Blahs Party, a live auction and "artistic" potluck lunch on Jan. 28. More than 100 items were donated for the auction, including a week-long time share vacation at a premier international resort; a two-night stay at Waterfall House in Monteagle, Tenn.; an all-tuition-paid one-day watercolor painting workshop led by McDaniel; performances by acclaimed songwriters/musicians Wayne Jackson, Kenny Durham and Richard Armentrout; and a wide range of arts supplies, equipment and other items.
   "We raised $4,000 more than we did last year – it was a tremendous success," said McDaniel, who is already planning next year's event. "Proceeds from the live auction, along with cash donations, will be used by schools to purchase art supplies. Many schools in our area face fiscal challenges, which often limits available funding for arts education. This is a wonderful way for arts supporters to invest in the future artists of America."
    Receiving visual art education grants in 2006 are:
• Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools: Laurie Poole, Nashville School of the Arts, $600; and Laurie Poole and Deanna Fiorita, Nashville School of the Arts, $750.
• PENCIL Foundation School Supply Depot, $473.70.
• Williamson County Schools: Louise Braswell, Westwood Elementary, $500; Katy Lane, Pinewood Elementary, $500; and Maggie Tucker, Brentwood Middle School, $500.
• Franklin Special School District: Sharon Byers, Freedom Intermediate, $571; Naomi Norman , Liberty Elementary, $500; Linda Owens, Freedom Middle, $1,000; Kelly Selfe, Moore Elementary, $1,243.80; More Gail mcdaniel to present awards grants to public schools -- 2 and Cassie Stephens, Johnson Elementary, $500.

   

    Making donations of $25 or more were Jean Anderson, Richard Armentrout, Art Connection Painting Group, Art South Studios, ATM Productions, Athena Health Club and Day Spa, Thelma Baldwin, BancorpSouth, Bank of Nashville, Jean Barwich, Judy Butler, Marcia Campbell, Deborah Carman, Michael Carter, Thom Case, Evelyn Chandler, Beverly Cheek, Barbara Conrad, Lee Dabbs, Brenda DeLaney, Lilia Davis, Helen Derryberry, Susan Duncan, Kenny Durham, Karel Grace Dye, Mary Ann Eley, Cathy Ellis, Exit Realty Center, Jennifer Flynn, Elaine Ford, Priscilla Garcia, Jonatha Gibaud, Otis Godin, Carol Hall, Jennifer Hamilton, Laura Hampton, Sylvia Haneberg, Hanging Around Contemporary Art & Framing, Kathleen Haynes, Mike Hill, Judy Howell, Mary Isenman, I’ve Been Framed, Wayne Jackson, Gayle Jones, Ann Kegarise, Ron Kegarise, Sue Kinzer, Miera Kirsch, Judy Klich, gail Mcdaniel, Ken McDaniel, Linda McLaughlin, Kathy Minton, Farrell Morris, Peg Morrison, Rogers Morrison Sr, Mosaic Computer Services, Jane Newsom, Susan Panzarella, Cheryl Petty, Mary Phillips, Plaza Art Supplies, Iris Rotker, Susan Schatz, J.J. Sneed, The Saucy Sisters, Shine Time Records & Books, Louise Strang, Lisa Syler, Phyllis Tatum, Melissa Thomas, Twisted Sisters, Lucinda Trabue, Betty Valdes, Mary Kay Walton, LeeAnn West-Malm, Whiting Publicity and Promotions, Melinda Williams, Williamson County Cultural Arts Commission, Williamson County Medical Center, and Rebecca and Chris Youngblood.
    "We could not have done this without the support of the PENCIL Foundation of Nashville and BanCorpSouth of Brentwood," McDaniel added. “Our goal this year was to raise $4,000, and we exceeded our goal by more than $3,000. Since 2001, we’ve raised more than $17,000 to benefit arts education. This means so much to art teachers and their students."
    For more information about the Students and Friends of Gail McDaniel Award grants or to make a donation, call (615) 599-5115, send an e-mail to gail@gailmcdanielart.com, or visit http://www.gailmcdanielart.com.

Above Article is courtesy of
Williamson Herald, Tennessee

 



Art teacher Gail Mcdaniel, right, discusses techniques with Christine Burns of Nashville during a class at the Brentwood United Methodist Church on Tuesday night. Sharon Absher, left, and Donna Holland of Franklin, and Jennifer Hamilton of Spring Hill worked on paintings.


Proceeds will provide visual arts grants for Williamson, Davidson county public schools.

By KAREN EMERSON-McPEAK
Staff Writer

    The Chase-Away-The-Blahs Party started out with just two people wanting to chase away the ''cobalt blues,'' as Gail Mcdaniel, artist and host of the event, explains.
    Mcdaniel teaches several art classes locally and at various events during the year. This year the party is set for Jan. 29 from 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    ''I just looked at Ken one day and said, 'We need to have everybody over, it's such a blah time of the year.' We did,'' Mcdaniel said. ''The next time the students suggested we add an auction. Then it's just sort of evolved from there.''
    The money raised from the auction has gone to various places in the past, but Mcdaniel and her art students felt that keeping the money in and around Williamson County was important.
    ''The students are so giving and wonderful and warm. It's very rewarding to work with them.''
    This year the event will join with the PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank to provide grant money for the visual arts in Davidson and Williamson counties through the Students of Gail Mcdaniel Award.
    Proceeds will be equally divided between Davidson and Williamson County public schools. The award money will be used to buy art supplies and/or for art-related personal development and will be awarded based on written grant applications.
    The goal this year is to raise $2,000. Ken Mcdaniel, Gail's husband, feels this is attainable.
    ''The first four 'Blahs' parties and mail solicitations raised over $6,500. If we raise $2,000, this would mean $1,000 for the visual arts in public schools in Davidson County and $1,000 in Williamson County. This is a chance to invest in FAA — that is, Future Artists of America.''
    According to Gail, the event is just a fun-filled time, a gathering of artists that includes food and the fun of an auction. The students themselves find and donate items. Sometimes it's just cleaning out their closets and getting rid of books or art supplies that they don't want or need.
    ''We do like to say, 'One artist's junk is another artist's treasure,' '' she said.

        Many of the artists bring items on the day of the event, but some have already told Gail what they'll be offering. The list includes the following:
    • Wayne Jackson has donated his musical talents. Jackson is the trumpet player of the two-person Memphis Horns group, which was formed in 1969. He has performed with a who's who of artists from around the world on more than 300 gold and platinum records.
    • Lucinda Trabue is offering two nights at Falling Waters, Rising Spirits, her second home on Monteagle Mountain. This is a completely furnished, secluded and modern three-bedroom, three-bathroom home on seven wooded acres that has a 300-foot waterfall behind it, all normally rented for $200 a night.
    • Jennifer Hamilton has donated a two-night weekend (Friday through Sunday) use of the guesthouse, which is located on their 300-acre farm in the middle of several other large farms in the wilds of southern Williamson County. Their guesthouse will sleep four, is fully furnished with kitchen and bath, and has two bedrooms — one with a double bed and the other with twin beds. Suggested rental price is $240 for the two-night weekend.
    • Mike Hill, the Michelangelo of fly-fish lure tying, is giving very beautiful, colorful and intricate one-of-a-kind hand-tied (by him) fishing lures, which are suitable for framing.
    • Rebecca Youngblood, Gail's daughter of Visalia, Calif., is a jewelry designer, with many Saks Fifth Avenue stores carrying her line of one-of-a-kind pieces of fine jewelry. Youngblood has created two pieces for this auction.
    But to get the full lineup of auction items, you have to go by and see what is available.
    The event is potluck, which, according to Gail, works out just fine.
    ''If we have all desserts, that's OK, too,'' she said.
    In her invitation, she suggests bringing artistic food and to ''bring a dish that looks like it was prepared … 'by a man going over the top of a hill singing — Robert Henri.' ''
    She admits this event has ''taken on a life of its own,'' starting out small and growing bigger each year, encouraging anyone to come spend their money.
    ''They just need to be an art lover and willing to support the arts in the area,'' Gail said.

For more information on the Chase-Away-The Blahs Party, call 599-5115. 

Above Article is courtesy of
Brentwood Journal, Tennessee

 



Gail McDaniel gives award grants to art teachers. .



   Local artist Gail McDaniel organized an event in January, called Chase Away the Blahs Party, that included a live auction. The $3,550 raised from the event recently was handed out by McDaniel in the form of award grants to local art teachers, including Susan Duncan, Loise Braswell, Elizabeth Pittsley, Heather Thorsby, Susan Harlan, Naomi Norman and Kelly Selfe. Additional support came from The PENCIL Foundation and BancorpSouth Bank of Brentwood. For information, call 599-5115, e-mail gail@gailmcdanielart.com or go online to www.gailmcdanielart.com.

Above Article is courtesy of
Review Appeal, Franklin, Tennessee

 


Winner of the TOTALLY TRANSPARENT WATERCOLOR AWARD given by the students of gail Mcdaniel at the 29th Tennessee Watercolor Society Show, Jackson, Tennessee, June 12, 2004.


Totally Transparent Watercolor Award
Laurin McCracken - Bearded Iris, 20 x 20
Click image to enlarge


Totally Transparent Watercolor Award
Laurin McCracken - Yellow Day Lily, 20 x 28
Click image to enlarge

       




$4,000 award will recognize traditional ‘transparent stylist’

By BONNIE BIRCH
Staff Writer

    FRANKLIN – The students of Gail McDaniel are making sure that at least one watercolorist won’t be a starving artist.
   
The students of the local art instructor raised $4,000 to present as a cash award to a fellow painter who has entered a totally transparent watercolor painting into the 29 th Tennessee Watercolor Society Show and Exhibition beginning May 17 in Jackson, Tenn.
    “Our goal with this award is to try to renew the enthusiasm for totally transparent watercolor painting. “It’s the traditional form used in watercolor painting and I call myself a watercolor purist,” said McDaniel.
   
In the art form, painters do not use white paint. Instead they let the white of the paper serve as the white definitions in the water-based painting. The painting must also be free from acrylics, gouache and casein.
   
Of the more that 100 watercolor societies in the country only two – The Transparent Watercolor Society of American and Watercolor West - deal exclusively with transparent watercolor.
   “Traditional watercolor painting is the most difficult medium to work with and the least appreciated,” she said.
  That’s why McDaniel’s students decided to reward a fellow purist. They know how long and hard he or she must have to work to create masterpieces.
   In 2002, Helen Burton of Cleveland, Tenn., received $1,825 from the bi-annual prize.

   To raise the funds for this year’s award, the artists held an auction Jan. 24 during their annual Chase-Away-The-Blahs-Party-Artistically.
  Donated auction items ranged from the simple including art books, paints and brushes to stays in a Monteagle home, Adams Edgeworth Inn or a 300 – acre Williamson County farm, tied fishing flies, jewelry carried by Saks 5 th Avenue, a Worth Collection scarf and buying time with trumpet player Wayne Jackson.
   The $1,840 raised at the event was combined with $2,200 produced at last year’s Blahs party and from monetary donations for a total of more than $4,000.
   “The award is not given by me but by my students. They were the ones who decided this would be a good thing. And the best part of all for the winning artist is that she gets to keep the painting in the end,” McDaniel said.



Local artist Gail McDaniel holds an auction item up for bidding during the Chase-Away-The-Blahs-Party-Artistically. The students of Gail McDaniel raised $4,000 through a couple of fund-raisers to present to an artist who creates the best totally transparent watercolor painting during the upcoming Tennessee Watercolor Society’s exhibition.


   
    The 44 donors who gave more $25 for the award include Wendy Adams, Sharon Anderson, Mary Ann Boysen, Marcia Campbell, Debbie Carman, Evelyn Chandler, Mary Clayton, Joan Coleman, Betsy Copley, Barbara Deep, Elaine Ford, Susan Graham, Karen Grant, Toni Hall, Jennifer Hamilton, Laura Hampton, Susan Harlan, Kathleen Haynes, Stephanie Helmey, Wayne Jackson, Susan James, Ann Kegarise, Ron Kegarise, Sue Kinzer, Maxime Kunkel, Ann Lea, Linda Martine, Phyllis McGreagor, Gayle Mitchell, Jane Newsom, Kay Rickenbaugh, Susan Schatz, Dot Small, Kathleen Sparkman, Louise Strang, Lisa Syler, Lucinda Trabue, Betty Valdes, Kathy Wales, Ann Warden, Margaret Watson, Zoe Wells, Nancy Whittemore and Melinda “Topper” Williams.

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean, Williamson A.M.

 


 

   FRANKLIN – When watercolor students heard that the Tennessee Watercolor Society was short of funds to honor artists, they donated their own money.
   The funds raised will be used to start The Students of Gail McDaniel Award to be presented to a deserving artist during the 28th Tennessee Watercolor Society Exhibition. The award will be given in the totally transparent watercolor category.
   About 120 artists will be participating in the exhibition.
Watercolor students were asked to donate $25 to the cause. Each student who donated will have his name listed in the exhibition color catalogue.
   The 44 artists raised a total of $1825 for the award. Of the total, $660 was raised for mail in donations while $1165 was raised during McDaniel’s February Blahs Party auction.
   McDaniel’s students who gave the funds were Sue Adkins, Gloria Bond, Marilyn Brisbois, Marcia Campbell, Mary Clayton, Linda Doyal, Bob Erwin, Eileen Fels, Elaine Ford, Lee Foreman, Mike Hill, Marilyn Hobbs, Carrie Hodge, Shirley Hoffman, Cathy Jones, Ann Kegarise, Ron Kegarise, Mary Jean Kruse, Maxine Kunkel, Dagmar Langon, Cheryl Lankhaar, Pamela Larson, Mary Loveless, Gail McDaniel, Ken McDaniel, Cathy Minton, Jane Newsom, Joseph Paresley, Susan Schatz, Barbara Schwab, Dot Small, Ellen Soper, Lisa Syler, Carole tournaud, Betty Valdes, Jenny Wallens, Anne Warden, Zoe Wells, Sharon Whitmire, Carol Wiel, Melinda Williams and Sonia Zachary.

Ken and Gail speak to watercolor students during an n recent “February Blahs” party. Gail McDaniel’s watercolor students have set up a fund to provide money for an art award as part of the annual Tennessee Watercolor Society Exhibition.

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean, Williamson A.M.

 



"Monet's Green Boat." by Helen Burton, 2002
Click image to enlarge

       



   FRANKLIN - Helen Burton of Cleveland, Tenn., received $1825 prize thanks to the students of Franklin artist Gail McDaniel.
   Burton was presented with the “Students of Gail McDaniel” Award during the 28th Tennessee Watercolor Society Exhibition. She won the prize for her watercolor painting, Monet’s Green Boat.
   McDaniel’s students set up the award for the Totally Transparent Watercolor category by donating $25 each for the Biannual Tennessee Watercolor Society Show.
   The students donating the money for the awards included Sue Adkins, Gloria Bond, Marilyn Brisbois, Marcia Campbell, Mary Clayton, Linda Doyal, Bob Erwin, Eileen Fels, Elaine Ford, Lee Foreman, Mike Hill, Pegine Hill, Marilyn Hobbs, Carrie Hodge, Shirley Hoffman, Cathy Jones, Anne Kegarise, Ron Kegarise, Mary Jean Kruse, Maxine Kunkel, Dagmar Langon, Cheryl Lankhaar, Pamela Larson, Mary Loveless,


Helen Burton of Cleveland, Tenn., won the “Students of Gail McDaniel” Award for Totally Transparent Watercolor in the 28th Tennessee Watercolor Society Exhibition for her piece, Monet’s Green Boat. The award is funded by students who are learning watercolor from Franklin artist Gail McDaniel.
.....................................................................................................
Gail McDaniel, Ken McDaniel, Cathy Minton, Jane Newsom, Joseph Presley, Susan Schatz, Barbara Schwab, Dot Small, Ellen Soper, Lisa Syler, Carole Tournaud, Lucinda Trabue, Betty Valdez, Jenny Wallens, Anne Warden, Zoe Wells, Sharon Whitmire, Carol Wiel, Melinda Williams and Sonja Zachary.

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean, Williamson A.M.

Click here to Return to Galleries page

 


"6201 Belle Rive Dr." by Sandra Osborne, 1998
Click image to enlarge


"Comfort and Joy." by Wendy Latimer, 1999
Click image to enlarge

       



By BONNIE BIRCH

   BRENTWOOD - For the past three years, award-winning watercolorist Gail Mcdaniel has been encouraging the students in her two art classes to come up with their own designs to fashion into holiday cards and decorations.
    And for first-year student Ron Kegarise of Brentwood, the challenge was not one easily passed up, so he created a scene

of a winter tree, a red cardinal, a mailbox stuffed with Christmas packages and a warm farmhouse in the background.
   "I showed the painting to my daughter during Thanksgiving," Kegarise said, "And the tears just welled up in her eyes. To send something that you created personally is always special."
   The benefits of sending your special creations goes beyond impressing the neighbors with your

artistic talents. It is an opportunity for self-expression.
   Wendy Latimer made cards showcasing ornaments nestled among the evergreen branches and poinsettias. Maxine Kunkel of Thompson's Station, whose favorite subjects are children and horses, painted kids playing in the snow. And Zoe Wells sent out traditional cards with an old world Santa, a little Christmas tree and a snowman.

Geri Gray, who drives from Mt. Juliet to attend Mcdaniel's classes once a week, expressed contrasting sentiments.
   A rich lady toting shopping bags passes through a snowy city park barely noticing a homeless family sleeping in a tent and trying to keep warm. A tree decorated with gold balls stands between them, and an office party, a church and a Union Rescue mission building are part of the city skyline in the background.
    "It just shows the irony of our real lives," she said, "Every Christmas we do the little things like adopt a child from an Angel Tree or help out at a shelter. But it never seems to be enough."
   Mcdaniel's students get their

inspiration from a number of sources - some use photographs they have taken themselves, others find ideas out of magazines and books, while still others paint directly from their own imaginations. And depending on the experience level of the student, a single watercolor Christmas work can take only a day or a few weeks.
    Many local print shops can transform a painting into Christmas or note cards. Students can choose the quality, weight and color of paper, the size of their cards and have a pre-print greeting or Christmas poem inside. Of course, the cost of printing and painting supplies doe snot make it an economical option

as opposed to store-bought cards.    Personalized cards can average around $1 each in just the printing costs. Plus, the way they come back from the printers, you have to fold each individual card yourself, Kegarise said.
   And be forewarned, cautioned Wendy Latimer of Brentwood, that once family and co-workers get a taste of a personalized card, they will be checking their mailboxes for your next creation every December. "They all say that they've been wondering what my cards will look like this year. So you see, I have to make my own Christmas cards. I can't buy one now," she said.

Above Article is courtesy of
The Tennessean, Williamson A.M.

Click here to Return to Galleries page


     


Article courtesy of
Brentwood Journal, Brentwood, Tennessee


Watercolor artist McDaniel shares her talent teaching others

"Busy" is a word that Gail McDaniel not only knows the meaning of, she lives it daily. Not only is McDaniel an internationally recognized watercolor artist, she also teaches eight-week watercolor classes at Brentwood United Methodist Church, has private students and demonstrates Windsor-Newton paints, brushes and paper for Plaza Arts about every six months. She also continues her education regularly by going to classes, her most recent being a two-week Intensive Study Seminar in Taos, N.M., where she worked with several well-known watercolor artists.

James Ben Studio and Gallery in Franklin also exhibits her work, as does Puffy Muffin in Brentwood and Grayson Scott Interiors in Athens, Ala. Only last year, the Marriott at Cool Springs commissioned McDaniel to do 18 works for the convention centre which contained architectural painting of historic homes and places in Williamson County. She was surprised and nervous about meeting the deadline that they requested, but with the help and support of her husband, Ken, she met their March deadline with little problem. At the same time, her family moved into a new home in Franklin, one that was just right for her painting with a 20 x 20-foot studio including 14-foot windows with great north, south and west light flowing through.

One of her many projects is one that includes doing watercolor representations of homes for builder Bruce Hancock as they are completed in the new Laurel Brook subdivision.

Her self-described "use of luminous, reflected light in her transparent watercolors" has elevated her to an award-winning artist and instructor, including a commission from Gov. Louis B. Nunn of Kentucky. McDaniel has won awards in 14 injuried exhibitions and has permanent displays from coast to coast. Her style has a realistic approach and subjects include everything from "petals to portals, flowers to architecture."

McDaniel started painting about 16 years ago in South Carolina when a friend said, "Take a watercolor class with me." She did and still is painting. Her friend, on the other hand is not.

"Teaching is one of the greatest rewards," according to McDaniel, who teaches classes at Brentwood United Methodist Church as well as private students and a Sunday afternoon class at Cheekwood. She gives her students a lot of space allowing them to select their subject to paint, although she always has a suggestion. Most of the time she gives simple suggestions to her students allowing them to find their own style yet benefit from her years of knowledge. Her students range in age from young adults to seniors - many never having painted before and some who have been students for years. McDaniel recognizes that students each have to express their individual talent and that each student has his own special strength. Classes are geared for every level, from beginner instruction to experienced studio time, offering a variety of instruction from group to one-on-one critique.

Two of McDaniel's students, Terri and J.J. Sneed, exhibited in the recent Decorators' Show House, the Minnie Pearl Mansion, and student Maxine Kunkel won First-Place Watercolor in the Tennessee Art League's annual Juried Membership Show in March. Belle Meade Buffet Cafeteria also has an exhibit of 20 students that will be on display until July 29 and includes 27paintings of McDaniel. Students Wendy Latimer and Carrie Hodge will have work displayed in the Tennessee Watercolor Show, which is a juried show at Belmont University in July and August; Laura Olander was a featured artist at Pearfest in Brentwood; Candice Cato won the "Most Popular Piece" award at the TAL show; Greg Miles, a former student living in Colorado is now teaching and is represented by several galleries in the Southwest and Northwest; and Ann Smalldone is represented at two galleries in Palm Beach, Fla.

Call (615) 599-5115 to register for future classes, gift certificates and private instruction.

By Karen Emerson Mc-Peak
Staff Writer

   

Home / The Artist / Workshops / Student / Galleries / Commissions / Teaching / Technique Workshops

No work is to be copied without prior permission from gail Mcdaniel © 2001 gail Mcdaniel LLC
Site designed by Dentonsweb.com