Sunday, March 7, 2021
Famous artist’s journey
began in Hocking
County
https://www.logandaily.com/neighbors/famous-artist-s-journey-began-in-hockingcounty/article_e3da50ac-938f-5a8d-b850-1c6c2e9d50d2.html
Articolul despre Jerry in Logan Daily
News
• Dec 29, 2020
Jerry W. McDaniel during a video
interview with lleana Costea.
In this photo from The Logan Daily News,
a young Jerry McDaniel displays his Boy Scout
merit badges.
When the
renowned artist, illustrator and designer Jerry W. McDaniel was attending Logan
High School in the early 1950s, he was by his own admission a less than outstanding
student.
“I was never
there,” McDaniel frankly told The Logan Daily News. “I would be there on time
for classes and then I disappeared. I was always cutting classes, for I had to work
part time to support myself and my sister, Janice.”
McDaniel,
now 85 years old and living in California, did take an interest in sports as a student,
and also served proudly as the drum major for the school’s marching band.
The other
subject that held his attention was art, and he credits the school’s art
teacher at the time, Opal Wylie, with helping put him on the path to his
artistic career. In that career he has made a name for himself as a
“heterogeneous artist,” who has drawn on a wide range of styles and media to
produce striking work in formats that include posters, corporate ads, magazine
illustrations, book covers and modernist paintings.
Though
Wylie’s training was actually in math rather than art, she spotted McDaniel’s talent,
and got him to apply for a scholarship at Columbus Art School (now the Columbus
Academy of Art & Design). The day the application was due, Wylie came into
the J.C. Penney store in Logan where McDaniel was working, and asked if he had completed
the portfolio that had to be included. He told her it was finished but at home;
she told him to run and get it, and when he returned with it, Wylie “jumped in her
car and took off for Columbus” to meet the application deadline.
That’s one
of many stories that McDaniel has shared with a retired university professor
who, after falling in love with his work almost a decade ago, has taken on the
mission of serving as his publicist and biographer.
Ileana
Costea, Ph.D., a retired professor of automation engineering with a background in
architecture and art, is director of the I.C. Art Gallery in Encino, Calif.,
which she founded in 2011 to exhibit and promote McDaniel’s work. She is also
working on multiple books about the artist, including an autobiographical
volume, “Out of Nowhere,” based on stories about his life that McDaniel has
shared with her.
“Through the
love for Mr. McDaniel’s art, I got to learn about his life in the state of Ohio
and New York City,” said Costea, who comes from Romania. “It was a new world I
was discovering… from his stories.”
In doing her
background research, which included trips to McDaniel’s childhood communities
in Ohio, Costea found a wealth of material in back issues of The Logan Daily
News, which had included the young McDaniel in numerous articles relating to his
involvement in sports, marching band, theater and Boy Scouts, as well as some
of his early forays into art. In 1949, for example, while his family was living
in Union Furnace before moving to Logan, McDaniel was named Boy Scout of the
Year for earning 89 merit badges out of a possible 112. “The Logan Daily News
ran an interview with me with a big picture,’ he told Costea for her book. “I
became a star!”
On the
artistic side of things, the paper’s Oct. 31, 1952 edition reports McDaniel’s winning
top honors in the high school division of a Kiwanis –sponsored contest, in which
local students painted Halloween illustrations on the windows of Logan storefronts.
McDaniel won first prize with a painting of “three ghoulish figures” on the
window of J.C.Penney’s.
The paper
was still giving McDaniel coverage as recently as May 2016, when it reported on
the 37th annual Logan High School Alumni Day, at which he was one of the
guests.
A draft of
“Out of Nowhere” tells the remarkable story of McDaniel’s life up through his
art school days. He was born on Rabbit Ridge near Zaleski, and grew up in local
communities including Union Furnace and Athens before landing in Logan after
his parents divorced and his father committed suicide. His father had been a
cattleman who had also worked in a coal mine, a meatpacking plant, a power
plant and on a railroad. McDaniel himself had his first job at 5 years old,
tending a water jug for workers at a strip mine run by his father and uncle. In
his high school days he would work at a local movie theater, an ice cream
parlor and the Penney’s store.
When, at
around age 5, McDaniel drew a crayon picture on the freshly whitewashed cellar
wall of the family home, he expected a harsh punishment; instead his parents drove
him to Nelsonville, bought him “a ton of art materials,” and encouraged his talent.
The story in
the draft manuscript takes McDaniel through his graduation from CAS, leaving
him on the doorstep of his move to New York, and a career that would lead to having
his work shown in venues that include New York’s Museum of Fine Arts, the Smithsonian,
and the U.S. Air Force Art Collection.
The Logan
Daily News asked McDaniel if he had any words of wisdom to share with the next
great artist who might even now be attending Logan High School.
“Visit every
art museum you can, look at all the art books you can. But exhibitions are better
than books,” he advised. “Talk to your art class teacher. Ask them what they can
suggest. Look on the Internet at various art schools to see what areas might interest
you. Find out about scholarships. Find out about their requirements — for me Mrs.
Wiley did it; you should do it yourself.”
Students who
think art might be their calling, he said, should “look at art, they should try
to find out where the opportunities are, they should be proactive and try to understand
what kind of art they want to get into… And they should keep on drawing.
As a famous
artist Phil Hayes, now deceased, told me: ‘Draw. Draw. And then draw again.’”
Those
interested in learning more about Jerry W. McDaniel and his work can find more
information on these websites:
• http://ic-art-gallery.com/artist
•
http://jerrywmcdanielstudios.com/
•
https://www.ccad.edu/blogs/move-aside-mad-men
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