GELA teams with Ginger McGann Design International

We are proud to announce that Genius Effect will now be handling all marketing and promotional efforts for Ginger McGann Design International. We look forward to designing a slate of multi-media assets from video, still photography, web, and live events. Stay tuned for more!!!

Recording Artist, Anne Montone

Recording Artist Anne Montone


About Ginger McGann:
A former women’s fashion designer and art teacher, Ginger McGann brings a unique and diverse range of talents to every endeavor. Prior to starting her own design firm she held the position of lead fashion designer at major internationally-based companies, two of included a Chorus Line and Organically Grown. She designed out of major cities including Los Angeles, New York, Hong Kong, London, Paris, and Milan. Notably, she was nominated three years in a row for the Tommy Award, the highest level of recognition a fashion designer could receive in the United States. After graduating from university and up until starting a family, she was a high school art and art history teacher. While teaching, she was prolific in making her own works of art, which she displayed in galleries throughout Los Angeles, New York, and London. Her main skill has always been in painting but she also has experience working in the fields of sculpture, pottery, glass composition, and jewelry making.

Of recent, painting and jewelry design has re-emerged as two of Ginger McGann’s key passions. She continues to operate GMDI, an international architecture firm, carrying out projects for her most important clients, but her focus has shifted to creating a grouping of artworks in order to be shown in galleries on both coasts, given exposure in lifestyle magazines, and promoted on an international scale. The style of painting that Ginger McGann is most passionate about is a new style that incorporates transparent layers of lush colors in non-objective/abstract themes. Her jewelry designs can be described as totally unique compositions of stones emulating her paintings: rubies, emeralds, sapphires, fire opals, imperial jade, peridots, and amethysts.