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Donna Elias was born in the early 1960’s in Newark, New Jersey.
The name Elias, properly pronounced “ah-lee-is” is Spanish
on her fathers side, (her mother’s heritage is Sicilian). While
Donna was still in grade school, her family moved 100 miles south
to the famed shore resort of Atlantic City. This move from the inner
city to the beach was to shape Donna’s life in a way her parents
couldn’t have imagined.

As a child, Donna enjoyed sketching and drawing things she saw
in magazines and books. By age twelve, she had already made up her
mind to be an artist. Donna attended Atlantic City High School and
took art as an elective. Like many of her friends, she worked summer
jobs on the city’s famous boardwalk. One of the most unique
spots on the boardwalk was Louis Artist Village, run by the village’s
eccentric namesake, Louis Levine. The Artist Village was the most
well known Caricature and Portrait Studio in Atlantic City. Though
she had never really drawn a caricature or portrait before, Donna
wandered in one day and asked for a job. Levine, who always had
an eye for talent, gave her a job. She was sixteen. Caricature drawing
was fun and seemed to come naturally to Donna. She soon excelled
at the tourist driven art form. The Village was alive and buzzed
with excitement. Hundreds of tourists wondered in daily and Donna
often worked twelve-hour days. She loved it. Her fellow artists
were an eclectic mix of talented people, who encouraged Donna to
further her skills and explore her abilities.


Donna left the artist village a year after graduating high school.
She was considering a career as a fashion illustrator and even dreamed
of becoming a Disney cartoonist. But without the financing for formal
art schooling, these career choices were just out of reach. Undeterred,
the young aspiring artist began schooling herself in pen and inks
and later watercolors. She enjoyed drawing a variety of subjects,
including dragons, wizards, fashion and architecture. Donna managed
to make a little money doing odd projects and painting signs, but
all the while she had to work in the real world to earn a living.
Making it with her “talent” just wasn’t happening.
She took a job with a chain of jewelry stores working as a store
clerk. She worked her way up to manager and eventually made district
manager. Over the next few years she learned some very valuable
management and business skills. Her hard work and dedication were
paying off, but she still wasn’t doing the kind of work she
wanted to.
In 1988, in a bid to return to her true passion, she quite her job
and once again dove into the art world. That spring Donna and opened
up a small gallery in Cape May, New Jersey.

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Cape May is one of the most beautiful towns in New Jersey, if not
America. The shore resort is at the southern most point in New Jersey,
bordering the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay. The town is
filled with so many classically restored Victorian homes that the
entire city was designated a National Historic Landmark. A true
gem of a location for any aspiring or established artist. Donna
opened her gallery that spring with only a hand full of assorted
paintings and pen & inks to hang on the wall. She quickly got
busy painting the beautiful landmarks of Cape May,
along with sketches of everything from mythical dragons to teddy
bears.


Cape May is also where Donna “discovered” and painted
her very first lighthouse. Until this point, she really had never
given lighthouses a second thought. But the lighthouse at Cape May
intrigued her. It was spectacular! Tall and majestic, beautiful
and proud. Quintessentially maritime. An historic loan sentinel
quietly starring out over the Atlantic. Donna did several quick
pencil sketches of the light and hung them in her gallery. To her
surprise and utter delight, they sold immediately. She added more
renditions of the light and they too were well received. Soon her
customers began requesting other beacons from all points far and
wide. So Donna hit the road and visited some of New Jersey’s
other lights - first visiting Barnegat light on Long Beach Island.
Having recently visited Key West, Florida, she painted this light
next from photographs her husband had taken. Her lighthouse prints
were a hit, but Donna quickly tired of running a retail store and
closed the gallery that fall after only six months in business.
“...her lighthouses sparkle and shine like few others;
her work is a tribute to the romantic symbols of our maritime heritage.”
Wayne Wheeler
President, US Lighthouse Society


Donna and her husband put together a plan to form a business where
they could combine their talents. He was a traveling salesman and
frequented resort towns nationwide. She, of course, was an artist.
Their plan was to travel together to resort areas where Donna would
paint the local scenery; he would then peddle the work to the local
merchants. Well, as it turned out, there were lighthouses in almost
every coastal town they visited.
One day while driving down 95 South to Florida, Donna came up with
the idea of painting lighthouses with navigational sea charts as
the background. That very same day, she stopped at a boating store
and picked up a bunch of navigational charts. She would use each
lighthouse’s actual regional chart for reference and as part
of the design. That evening at the kitchen table, Donna painted
her very first “Sea Chart Light”.
The Sea Chart Lights were the most unique and innovative work she
had done to date. Enthused, she now set her sights on creating a
comprehensive series of work celebrating all of America’s
lighthouses…The Great American Lighthouses Collection ®
was born.
“In 1988 Donna Elias painted a lighthouse – Today
she’s a one woman industry”
United Press International


To accomplish her work Donna had to visit dozens of lighthouses
across the country. The work was fun and interesting; visiting well-known
resort towns like Key West (a favorite of the artist) and remote
places like Paradise, Michigan home to the Whitefish Point Lighthouse.
With every lighthouse she painted, a request would come in for another
one, many she hadn’t even heard of! At the time, she had no
idea there were over six hundred lighthouses in America. The more
she visited them, the more she learned about them, the more she
painted them...the more she grew to love lighthouses
Donna and her company began contributing to projects involved in
lighthouse preservation. She joined the US Lighthouse Society and
began working with local lighthouse preservation groups wherever
she could. Handing out brochures, encouraging support and contributing
financially as much as she could. One day she received a letter
from the US Lighthouse Society, the prestigious education and preservation
group, officially endorsing her work.
The Great American Lighthouse collection was a big hit and their
business grew quickly. Soon stores across the country began carrying
Donna’s prints. Eventually manufacturers began approaching
the artist about licensing her designs for other products such as
gifts and home accents.
“Painting lighthouses is her forte...the artist is known
across the country”
Courier Post


In 1994, Donna was asked to do a signing at Walt Disney World in
Florida. This marked a turning point in her career and a personal
high water mark. Donna has always loved everything Disney and once
even dreamed of being an animator there. To be connected with them
in any way, was an absolute joy.
Sea World of Florida began carrying Donna’s work around that
time also and asked her down to do a signing as well. She even painted
a Key West Light for a new theme section of their park. Donna fell
in love with Sea World and has since returned several times to the
adventure Park. Donna’s theme park work was again highlighted
when Universal Studios asked her to create the “official”
grand opening poster for their new Island of Adventure theme park
in Orlando.
The park icon was an ancient looking lighthouse, modeled somewhat
after the first lighthouse of Alexandria, Egypt. Donna attended
the parks private grand opening ceremonies with the likes of Eddie
Murphy and Steven Spielberg. It was a blast.


Donna’s lighthouse work continues and today she has completed
an astonishing 250 paintings. While she visits many of the lights
she paints, the artist also works from an extensive library, the
Internet and from photographs friends and fans have sent her from
around the world.
To accompany her lighthouse collection, she created “Heroes
of the American Coast”, a series of paintings celebrating
the US Lifesaving Service, the forerunner of the Coast Guard, and
the sister service of the lighthouse service. Only a hundred or
so of these historic structures survive today. The stories of the
heroic lifesavers that worked these stations are fascinating. Donna
hopes someday the public will become as interested in US Life-Saving
Service, as they are in lighthouses.


“Summer has always been my favorite time of the year.
I love taking walks along the ocean or sitting on the beach
with my toes in the sand, smelling the salt air and listening to
the sound of the surf before me. These are the relaxing
moments I cherish most by the seaside.”
Donna Elias
While Donna is best known for painting lighthouses, she also delights
in painting other coastal scenes. Her love and life at the seashore
have inspired numerous other paintings and series of work such as
her “By the Seaside” and “Surfboats by the Seashore”.
More diverse then most realize, Donna’s studio is filled with
hundreds of sketches, prototypes and painting of everything from
tropical birds to marine mammals. Some have been published, many
more have not.


Donna Elias is still very much a Jersey Girl and is proud to call
the Jersey Shore her home. Donna’s private studio is located
on Clam Creek in the marina district of Atlantic City. Her workshop
is in a 100-year-old bay front warehouse, and her home is on the
Great Egg Harbor River. No wonder she only paints in “watercolors”.

- Absecon Lighthouse Museu |
- Acadia National Park |
| - Atlantic City Historical Museum |
- Calvert Maritime Museum – Cove Point Light |
- Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum |
- Cape Henry Lighthouse |
- Concord Point Light |
- Grand Traverse Lighthouse Museum |
- Great Lakes Lighthouse Festival |
- Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum |
- Hereford Inlet Lighthouse |
- Hull Life Saving Station & Museum |
- Indian River Life Saving Station |
- Key West Art & Historical Society |
- Ponce Inlet Lighthouse Museum |
- QVC Television Network ® |
- Scituate Lighthouse |
- Sea World of Florida ® |
- Trump Taj Mahal |
- Twin Lights |
- Tybee Island Lighthouse Museum |
- Universal Studios Islands of Adventure ® |
- United States Lighthouse Society |
- Walt Disney World ® |
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