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  • June 17, 2020 12:38 PM | Deleted user

    by Paula Fowler, Gallery Co-Director

    Our gallery may be closed, but behind the scenes, our volunteers have been working nonstop to keep WAS-H the same warm and exciting place we all know and love. The serendipitous outcome of our challenging time is the opening of our very first online show, "Views Through the Windows of Our Isolation". Special thanks during this development process must go to our President, Beth Graham, our Technology Director, Karen Stopniki, the WAS-H Administrative Assistant, Martin Butler and faithful volunteers, Sally Hoyt, Cissy Geigermann and Nancy McMillan. We hope that you enjoy the ease with which you can now share your work with your family, friends and potential buyers. This is a big step, and we were so excited to see the images of the wonderful paintings as they came in, all 147 of them. Everyone was so patient when we had to tweak the entry process. We'll continue to work to make this easier each time.

    Our judge, Cookie Wells has a BS in Commercial Art from Lamar University and spent 30 years in the commercial graphic world before turning to watercolor. She’s a member of the Watercolor USA Honor Society and of Women in Visual and Literary Arts. Her work can be seen at Archway Gallery. Cookie accepted the challenge of doing her first online judging and was amazed at the quality of the work. She said that she looked at the images mostly through the eyes of this isolation and all that brings into our experience. She then stepped away and visualized what stood out in her mind. From that process, she chose the following:

    For the First Place, she chose Helen Beacham's "Attitude". She shared that it was an "exceptional painting...so strong. The modern, loose, wet background against the technically superbly painted child. The attitude of the child says it all..."

    Second Place went to Chaitanya Alli for "Relaxing afternoon". Cookie said it was a great representation of our isolation and that "the colors are remarkable." She loved " the dark/light contrasts. A really beautiful painting".

    Honored with Third Place was Linda McDonald's "My Front Door in Lockdown". Cookie loved "the simple but strong statement this painting makes. Wonderful wet background, nicely painted packages. Great contrast." She felt it was a statement of our world today.

    Honorable Mentions were awarded to:

    Terri Colangelo - "Rush Hour - March 2020"

    Diane Cox - "Waiting to Go Out Again"

    Cheryl Evans - "Shelter in Place - Painting in the Time of Pandemic Series"

    Barbara Hall - "Self Portrait"

    Laurie Hammons - "Looking Out My Bedroom Window"

    Hiep Nguyen - "Spring is Still Out There"

    Zahid Shaikh - "Lockdown Blues"

    See all the entries here.

  • June 17, 2020 12:35 PM | Deleted user

    Helen Beacham, who won the First Place with her painting "Attitude", wrote:
    Every painting offers its own set of challenges. I only just recently (3 years ago?) started painting figures and I admit it's still stressful for me.

    My challenge with this figure was to a) to make sure she still looked like a little girl and not a short grownup, and b) to avoid making her right leg look cut off, but rather like it's bent back against the wall.

    I tend to work in lots of layers. I start out pale all over and see if I like the color layout before committing to darker colors. I hone in on the focal point by making sure all my other areas are only supporting characters. The three intuitive but highly accidental 3 black strokes near her face help my eye to go to her face (I say "accidental" because they were much lighter marks as seen elsewhere in the graffiti, at which point I had to decide whether to leave them alone, wash them out or make them darker. I chose to make them even darker and use them as a tool. A bit risky...). I also placed a shadow dark next to her right cheek, again to draw attention to her pouty face. The graffiti itself was a challenge and I chose to paint it by using mostly wet into wet strokes.

    Helen's art can be found on www.HelenKBeacham.com and www.HelenKBeacham.blogspot.com

    Linda McDonald, winner of the Third Place with her painting "My Front Door in Lockdown", sent us the following:

    After considering June’s theme of isolation, I wanted to capture elements of that period that we all experienced. While I was out cycling around my neighborhood, I noticed a number of familiar boxes left on the doorsteps which gave me inspiration for this painting.

    I decided on the general details and set about finding the right doorway to paint. While the boxes looked abandoned, I wanted to contrast them with the right front door, walkway and light with the resulting shadows. I went back to the same location to study the evening light for the shadows while watching how the sun fell. I changed the door to have an arch, as it worked better and provided contrast to the shapes of the boxes. I also felt the shadows had to originate on the opposite side of the door and the Amazon boxes, as they were the focal point of the painting. Working with complimentary colors providing warm and cool areas.

    I felt that everyone could relate to the key components of the painting, but importantly, it really was fun to work on during this extraordinary period of our lives.

    Barbara Hall, who received an honorable mention for her "Self-Portrait", wrote:

    Since we’ve been on lockdown, my studio mates and I have been taking turns assigning ourselves subjects for paintings. We text photos of our work and have a weekly critique via Zoom. The painting for which I received Honorable Mention was the result of a self-portrait assignment. I chose to use mostly black and white with a splash of color to reflect my mood at the time - a bit down in the dumps, but optimistic we’ll get through these trying times. I also wanted to convey the importance of artists in a crisis. They document what’s happening, inspire others, and express complicated emotions.

    Zahid Shaikh, who was awarded an honorable mention for "Lockdown Blues", wrote:
    I wanted to convey an expression of loneliness and desperation during the current pandemic, especially among the empty-nester seniors in society. I used the predominant blue color to enhance the feeling of isolation.

  • May 31, 2020 9:08 PM | Deleted user

       Dear WAS-H Members & Friends,

    I hope this letter finds you and your friends & family safe and healthy. This wish is so much more meaningful this year, isn’t it? I am pleased and honored to serve as WAS-H’s President for the 2020-2021 year. I am also very grateful for the Past Presidents, Kathleen Church, Laura McMahon, & Louise Bateman, and to all previous WAS-H leaders with whom I have served with over the last 4 years. I am so thankful for our Board of Directors, for their leadership and their faithful volunteer service to our mission of promoting watercolor art. I am indebted to them for the support they so graciously provide.

    We might call this “The Year of the Corona Virus.” The challenges it has brought to us this year could cause us to stumble and fall or to adapt and thrive. The question is, “Are we nimble enough to quickly respond to the new circumstances and end up with new opportunities?”

    My answer is “YES!” Instead of pulling the wagons around and hunkering down to wait for a return to normalcy, we have set about recreating our new normal. We spent the six weeks from March 15-April 30 learning with other cultural arts and non-profit organizations how to:

    • create safe spaces for our members

    • grow membership

    • continue our wonderful painting classes and workshops while in isolation

    • continue our monthly gallery exhibits

    • use online technology such as ZOOM, our own YouTube channel, and OBS broadcasting to provide events & instruction delivered direct into your home

    It has been exhausting work, but also invigorating. While researching ways to create our new normal, we held these events:

    • general meeting, with voting, and online art demo

    • “20 in 20” painting challenge over Facebook & Instagram (Karen Armstrong, social media)

    • 10 pilot online art classes shared via ZOOM, with participants from at least 7 states (Education Director, Nicole Hansen)

    We have been immersed in mastering new technology and hardware that will soon allow WAS-H to broadcast each of our teachers from the WAS-H classroom out to homes across the country. When we can return to holding on-site, in person classes, we might also broadcast the classes to others in their homes. The possibilities are still a bit like Star Trek, “going where no one has gone before.”

    Due to quarantining, we had to cancel our April and May gallery exhibits, but we used that time to figure out how to do take-in, judging, and awards all digitally, protecting the health of members and staff, while showcasing the beautiful work of our member artists over the internet. Today “take-in” registration opens online for our June show. Directions are on our home page and we are keeping our fingers crossed that there won’t be too many glitches. The Gallery team, under the direction of Paula Fowler, has tested all the procedures and are piloting a Help Desk to guide members through this new approach. As we explore all these new ways to be, we ask you to be patient & understanding with those leading meetings & classes, as we are all learning.

    The Board of Directors was unanimous is deciding to keep our two employees and our three contract workers on the payroll during this season of isolation. Our administrative assistant, Martin Butler, has been checking in at the building weekly, answering voice messages and emails, and will continue to work at home thanks to technology, until such time as it is safe for us to return to our wonderful facility. Be sure to check that we have your current email, address, and phone number in our directory, as this is our main means of communication. Martin can help you with any of these.

    We continue to see members renewing their membership, making it possible for us to continue our work during this challenging time. Thank you!

    Around the world and across faiths spring is always considered a time of renewal, rebirth, growth and abundance. The WAS-H community has many blessings and I count the unwavering support of our members, our volunteers, and directors to sustain us through these times of unprecedented challenge and the difficult days that may still lie ahead. Please know that we are working hard behind the scenes to offer new opportunities and we are counting the days until we can safely welcome you back. Join us for our online meetings, online demos, online classes and exhibits, until that time.

    Stay well, stay safe, and keep painting!

    Beth Graham
    WAS-H President

  • May 31, 2020 9:05 PM | Deleted user

    By Paula Fowler and Nancy McMillan, Gallery Co-Directors

    As we excitedly launch our first online show for WAS-H this June, we’re also looking ahead to July and August shows. We’re uncertain at this time when the gallery will be open again. The board is carefully monitoring health and safety recommendations of the city and will keep you posted on when we can gather in person again. With that in mind, we are planning that the July show will be online. A prospectus for each of these summer shows will be posted soon. So that you can begin planning, here are the themes:

    JULY SHOW THEME: Student Show/Teacher Appreciation

    AUGUST SHOW THEME: From My Studio

    We look forward to seeing your entries. Remember, for the student show, your work can have been done during a class.

  • May 31, 2020 8:45 AM | Deleted user

    By Nicole Hansen, WAS-H Education Director

    WAS-H introduced virtual classes via Zoom in May, and now we are launching a full summer program. Registration for summer virtual classes begins June 1!

    Stop by our website to sign up for:

    The Quarantine Sketchbook with Ellen Orseck

    Sketching People: From Pencil Line to Color with Ksenia Annis

    Liquid Charcoal with Laura Spector

    Abstraction: Organic & Geometric with Ellen Orseck

    From Selfie to The Painted Portrait with Ellen Orseck

    Rainbow Pets: How to Paint Animal Portraits with Luminous Watercolors with Ksenia Annis

    Mixing and Mingling: Luminous Grays and Blacks for Animal Portraits with Ksenia Annis

    Flowers in the Landscape and Still Life with Susan Giannantonio

    Additional classes, including Ed Pettitt’s Urban Sketching, will also be added in the coming weeks. Please watch the blog, and social media for more information!

  • May 31, 2020 8:41 AM | Deleted user

    Five members of WAS-H had paintings accepted into this year's Texas Watercolor Society's 71st exhibition: Jan Shrader, Carla Gauthier, Gay Paratore, Kim Granhaug and Robin Avery. The exhibition is being held at the Hill Country Arts Foundation in Ingram, Texas until the end of June.

    Gay Paratore received the Jacomini Family Memorial Award for her painting. Robin Avery received the Juror's Award for her entry into the show.

    Click here to see the exhibit

  • May 31, 2020 8:40 AM | Deleted user

    One HSPVA Senior and Two HSPVA Juniors Win 13th Annual WAS-H Scholarships

    By Haley Bowen, WAS-H Outreach Director

    Celebrating 13 years of giving to the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts (HSPVA), WAS-H has awarded three HSPVA students a total of $650.00. WAS-H scholarships are awarded to promising HSPVA watermedia students who wish to continue their art education in pre-college summer art programs or in college with a major in art. A $400.00 award went to Sarah Perkison – HSPVA graduating senior and watermedia artist. Two $125.00 awards went to HSPVA juniors and watermedia artists, Maya Chorn and Tania Vega. Constantly evolving as a society and vowing to live up to our mission, WAS-H yearned to continue our support for HSPVA students. The pandemic has been difficult to navigate, but WAS-H is thankful to be able to continue another year in our scholarship program.

    Our senior recipient, Sarah Perkison, has been accepted into the Fine Arts Department of the University of New Mexico. “Through the exploration of profoundly personal symbols I intend to learn and process my own emotions and better understand those of others,” Sarah shared in her Artist Statement. “The most important parts of the physical world are not physical at all, they are the created memory spaces in our minds which are contorted by recollections both tender and/or painful…I am interested in both the way that humans collect physical objects and keep them as vessels for memories and emotions, and the ways people discard or hide objects which have a negative evocation…My work reflects this feeling of sacredness by often containing aspects of spirituality and deep personal sentiment.”

    Our junior recipients Maya Chorn and Tania Vega were selected from a jurying process based on submissions from their Spring Portfolio. Haley Bowen, WAS-H Outreach Director, watermedia artist, teacher, and WAS-H member, was selected to help jury the show among other jurors. Both Maya Chorn and Tania Vega will use their scholarships towards art programs.

    WAS-H is honored to celebrate the talent, passion, sophistication, and technical skills of these young women. Sarah, Tania, and Maya, we wish you all the best in college, your pre-college programs, and in your future careers!

  • May 31, 2020 8:37 AM | Deleted user

    With sadness we announce the passing of Bob Watson, husband of WAS-H member Carol Watson. Bob was a trailblazing former Astro player who, following a stellar playing career, became MLB's first black general manager. He also built the Yankee's 1996 team that won the World Series. Read more here

  • May 14, 2020 4:39 PM | Deleted user

    The City of Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs (MOCA) and Downtown Redevelopment Authority, in partnership with gener8tor announced this week a new initiative supporting Houston artists, musicians, creatives and nonprofit leaders affected by the COVID-19 outbreak. Under the Houston Emergency Response Program, artists, musicians and creatives will have access to a free, week-long webinar series designed to identify and leverage critical resources in order to weather this ongoing public health crisis. 

    As part of the program, participants will be provided with daily webinars featuring experts in the following areas:

    • Sustaining your creativity and creative practice during COVID-19
    • Navigating and utilizing TikTok to bolster your online presence
    • Mental health and wellness resources for creatives
    • Unemployment assistance and financial relief resources
    • Fireside chat with Fernando Garibay, creative director and music producer on Lady Gaga’s Born This Way album

    Velissa R. Chapa, legal counsel to the commissioner representing employers at the Texas Workforce Commission, will lead the unemployment assistance webinar.

    In addition to webinars, daily one-on-one consultations to meet digitally with advisors on the above topics will be available. The gener8tor team will be working one-on-one with artists, musicians, creatives and nonprofit leaders to address the various issues they are facing during the COVID-19 outbreak.

    gener8tor will also work with community groups interested in providing pro bono resources to artists.

    Interested artists, musicians, creatives and nonprofit leaders may visit www.gener8tor.com/emergency-response-program/houston/creatives to register. The program will run from May 18, 2020 - May 22, 2020. All Houston-based creatives are welcome to apply.

    “The cultural community it is the heart and soul of Houston,” said Debbie McNulty, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs. “Right now, organization leaders and individuals are adapting and perservering to keep bringing us art, music and creativity when we need it most. We are thankful to gener8tor for joining our local response with this program and to the Downtown Redevelopment Authority for their support.”

    “Artists, musicians and creatives are a vital part of building thriving communities. We hope to call on our network of mentors, investors and partners to support artists through this new Emergency Response Program,” said Joe Kirgues, gener8tor co-founder.

    For more information on the Emergency Response Program, contact Abby Taubner at abby@gener8tor.com.

  • May 10, 2020 2:30 PM | Deleted user

    by Nicole Hansen
    WAS-H Education Director

    Register for classes listed below by going to Classes page on our website.  More classes will be added during the month of May, so stay tuned!

    VIRTUAL - Water, Rocks, Sky
    by Susan Giannantonio

    Come together and paint with friends. We will paint a water landscape with a loose, impressionistic approach.

    VIRTUAL - Urban Water Sketching at Home
    by Ed Pettitt

    Want to see your living room or backyard through new eyes? This online class will allow you to explore your home through the fun and relaxing medium of urban watercolor sketching.

    VIRTUAL - How to Photograph or Edit your Painting with a Tablet or Phone
    by Susan Giannantonio

    If you have a cellphone or tablet you already have the hardware and software needed to capture an image of your painting and edit it to ensure it looks as close to your painting as possible. Join this beginner class for tips to photograph and edit artwork on your mobile device.

    VIRTUAL - WaterMediaGallery Demonstration - Sell Your Art
    by Susan Giannantonio

    Join Susan Giannantonio for a free class where you'll learn to create your own online store and sell your artwork for 100% of the asking price.

    VIRTUAL - Painterly Pet Portraits: How to Capture Animals with Vibrant Watercolors
    by Ksenia Annis

    Calling all animal lovers! In this class, we will learn how to capture our favorite creatures with watercolor on paper using an imaginative, expressive color palette.

    VIRTUAL - Sketching People: From Pencil Line to Color
    by Ksenia Annis

    If you always wanted to draw people but didn’t know where to start, this class is for you. I will show you my technique for quickly capturing human form on paper and create fun, unique and expressive sketches of people.





1601 West Alabama Houston TX 77006
Gallery: 713-942-9966
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HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday, 10 am - 3 pm

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