When I attend the Hudson Art on the Green, I always look for former
BJ chief artist Dennis Balogh (a title held at various times by Joe Grace, Bud
Morris and Art Krummel).
Paula and I found him today wandering about other 36th
anniversary HAG artists although his tent (#80, in case you’re looking) already
was open.
Dennis and I have a lot of Ol’ Blue Walls history together.
Dennis drew some
of the most memorable covers for the Channels TV guide that I gave birth to in
1980, under the sprvsn of Jim Nolan (those who remember Nolan know that he
never used vowels in his memos, so sprvsn stands for “supervision.”).
When Jim and I were preparing for the launch of Channels, on the
Sunday of the Super Bowl (which we hoped in vain would be the Siper Bowl, for
Browns QB Brian Sipe – damn Red Right 88!), Jim had me provide him with another
page proof for every period or comma he inserted.
Hey, I didn’t complain, because the $10,000 in overtime that year
(really!) paid for The Pool That Channels Built on Morrison Avenue in Cuyahoga
Falls. My children and grandchildren and my late wife Monnie and I enjoyed Nolan’s
obsessive behavior for more than two decades. Every supersplash cannonball into
the pool was dedicated to Jm Nln.
Dennis and wife Patty have three children, graphic
designer Lori in New York City and two sons.
In other years at the Hudson show Paula and I ran
into retired BJ photographer Denny Gordon’s wife, Bonnie, and her sculptures;
former BJ chief artist Art Krummel, with his paintings; and former Features
Department editor and columnist Connie Bloom, with her fabric art (formerly
know as quilt art) as Ohio’s fabric art guru.
The National
Association of Black Journalists, National Headliner Awards and Creativity
Annual are among Balogh’s awards.
He did portaits of the past presidents of
Samford University in Alabama that hang on the campus walls.
He has illustrated
the top CEOs of the year for New York Stock Exchange Magazine.
But I take credit for Dennis getting his training wheels by doing Channels
magazine cover illustrations for me during my days as television editor at Ol’
Blue Walls. Yeah, right. He already was a legend by that time.
Balogh went from
Cooper School of Arts in Cleveland to the Cleveland Press to the Columbus
Dispatch to the BJ. Today, he and his wife live in Broadview Heights – phone (440)
546-9223 or email baloghstudio@yahoo.com
if you want to renew old times.
After 21 years at the
BJ, starting in 1985, Balogh was part of a major exodus in 2006 when 335 years
of experience walked out the door. The place has never been the same, with
the staff shrinking from 250 to less than 60. Those who remain are just as dedicated, but there are too many ownership downsizing alligators encumbering their efforts.
In 2000 the Beacon art staff included Terence Oliver, John “Derf”
Backderf, Art Krummel, Rick Steinhauser, Phil White, Dennis Earlenbaugh and Dennis
Balogh. It used to be if you said, “Come here, Dennis,” when Dennis Haas also
was there, a crowd would show up.
Now, they’re all enjoying a second life without the BJ, just as I have for
20 years. But our beautiful and fun memories will live with us till we move
into the cemetery permanently.
They are painting, making fabric art history in Connie Bloom’s case,
enduring earthquake tremors in New Zealand every week in Massey University Journalism faculty member Cathy Strong’s case or
traveling to 55 countries and 44 states, in my case (with Paula Tucker, former
State Desk reporter, at my side), when we’re not spending 4 to 6 months in
Paula’s 2nd home in The Villages, Florida, where we escape Ohio’s
winters that overwhelm our Tallmadge home.
Dennis reports that Art Krummel and wife Charlene Nevada sold their
retirement home in Garden City, South Carolina because the nasty weather in
Ohio they were trying to escape followed them there. They bought the place in
2010.
That’s why Paula and I rotate between The Villages, where it’s not as
nasty as Ohio’s snow and ice in the winter, and Tallmadge, where it’s not Devil’s
Oven weather like The Villages in the summer.
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