FACes
& PlaceS
The arts 2004
Elaine
Daniels
by Marilyn Bullock
Elaine Daniels is a woman of many talents. She
is a phenomenal gardener, a talented weaver and
seamstress, and an award winning ceramist. Elaine
has had her own ceramics studio and has been
creating and teaching ceramics for over 30 years.
Elaine
was born in Durham, NC. Her father was originally
from Cleveland, her mother from North
Carolina. Her father owned and managed multiple
five and dime stores throughout the South. He
enlisted in the Navy late during WWII and moved
the family to San Francisco for three years while
he completed his tour of duty. Upon his return
from the Navy, he moved the family back to Charlotte,
NC. Elaine attended parochial school for two
years, public school until she was a high school
sophomore, and then attended Dana Hall School
in preparation for going to Wellesley. “One
year at a all girl’s school was enough” and
she spent her remaining year in Florida, where
her family had moved that year.
Elaine attended college with a major in psychology
and a minor in art. During a family visit in
Florida, Elaine, then 18, started dating Eliot
Daniels, a friend of a friend. She never dated
anyone else.
Elaine
and Eliot dated for three years before getting
married in 1956. They lived in Hawaii
for the first two years of their marriage. They
did everything together - they traveled, gardened,
and played bridge and tennis. In 1961 and
1963 they adopted two children – a
daughter and a son respectively. In the 60s they
moved to Florida where Elaine started taking
Raku pottery classes. She loved making pottery
and eventually hired a group of Seminole Indians
to build her a “chickee,” a hut-like
structure, where she set up her own pottery studio.
Elaine has been a sculptor and ceramist ever
since. When she and Eliot moved to Washington
Crossing, PA in 1982, she set up a studio there
too.
While
their children were growing up, Elaine spent
a number of years running her own interior
design business and dog breeding business – schnauzers
and Belgian sheep herders. At one point, she
had nine Bouvier des Flandres ( very large fluffy
dogs) puppies that had the run of the house and “chewed
all of the woodwork 2 feet down.”
Sadly,
in 1993 Eliot died unexpectedly from a reaction
to a drug given to him in the hospital.
What separates Elaine from most people is her
wonderful positive attitude. “Why spend
your time unhappy.” she states, not as
a question, but as a matter of fact. She remembers
her husband as a very happy person. “He
woke up happy. He always had a smile on his face.” She
had 37 wonderful years with Eliot and considers
herself lucky to have found her soul-mate.
Elaine
made the decision to move out of Washington
Crossing and begin anew. She has lived in New
Hope since 1994 and, at the suggestion of a good
friend, says “yes” to just about
everything her friends suggest to her – such
as traveling to the Galapagos, Viet Nam, Camboida,
and Bangkok, taking a camel ride in Jordan, heli-hiking
in Canada, and touring Italy and Japan.
Elaine spends much of her time in her pottery
studio, her two doges, Lily, a black 2 year old
Doberman, and Camille, a nine-year-old Jack Russell
terrier, not-so-obeniently at her side. Elaine
hand builds all of her creations, often creating
a large sculpture that starts from a small pinch
pot.
Her
artwork is heavily influenced by nature and
things in the environment. Elaine does not
like to be “routinized” so every
project is a new experience. Elaine likes working
with porcelain, a type of clay that allows one
to make very thin and delicate designs. She likes
how easy it is to mold and how fluid and organic
it is. Elaine also enjoys botanical drawing and
is experimenting with combining the two art forms.
We
might all be better off following Elaine’s
philosophy of life, which is pretty much her
philosophy with clay – instead of trying
to control it, allow it to find you and flow
with it!
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