- SOUTHERN WATERCOLOR SOCIETY BY-LAWS
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- ARTICLE I NAME AND PURPOSE
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- Section One
- The name of this nonprofit corporation is Southern Watercolor
Society. The address of the principal office of this corporation
shall be the address of the current elected president.
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- Section Two
- As set forth in the Articles of Incorporation, this
corporation was formed to elevate the stature of watercolor
painters and educate the public to the significance of watercolor
painting as an important creative, permanent painting medium. The
corporation shall be dedicated to the highest aesthetic standards.
The organization shall further the interest of painters in
- watercolor painting by its programs and competitive exhibits,
and shall encourage watercolor study by art students and others
engaged in painting.
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- ARTICLE II BOARD OF DIRECTORS
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- Section One ( responsibility)
- The Board of Directors is the governing body of the
corporation and must comply with government requirements. The
Board shall have the power to elect officers, make policy decision
and change the corporation's mission. The Board shall be
responsible for the following:
- 1. Oversee the management of the organization
- 2. Set goals, establish policies, and develop long-range plans
- 3. Review budgets and program planning.
- 4. Represent the organization to the public.
- 5. Attend Board meetings and serve on committees.
- 6. Help get new members
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- Section Two (numbers of directors)
- Number of directors on the Board will be five (5) to seven (7)
at any one time. This number may be changed through an amendment
to the By-laws. The Board shall consist of the current officers
and past president and any others deemed proper by the officers. (
In 1999 the Board decreed that the Membership Chairperson would be
a member of the Board of Directors because of the importance of
that job. This was not a by-law change, as that was not required
by these by-laws.)
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- Section Three (terms)
- Term of office will be two years. Directors may serve a total
of two (2) terms.
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- Section Four (quorum)
- A quorum will consist of 1/3 of the total voting members of
the Board.
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- Section Five (time, place and number of meetings)
- The Board of Directors shall decide when and where the
meetings will take place. The Board will meet a minimum of one
time during the fiscal year and that meeting should occur within
the first quarter of that fiscal year.
- a) Special meeting may be called by the president, or two
members of the Board.
- b) The president will give two weeks notice to each member of
the Board prior to the regular meeting.
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- Section Six (compensation)
- The Board of Directors will receive no compensation for their
services. They
- may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred serving the
corporation; however, this must be approved by the vote of 1/3 of
the Board.
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- Section Seven (resignation and removal)
- A director may resign by submitting a written statement of
reason to the Chairman of the Board (president). A director may be
removed from office for the following reasons:
- 1. If absent for three or more meetings
- 2. Will not help in the activities of the organization
- 3. Has not avoided a major conflict of interest
- 4. Has made unjust claims for compensation or awards
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- ARTICLE IlI. OFFICERS and BOARD OF DIRECTORS
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- Section One
- The elected officers of this corporation are the Board of
Directors. Officers shall consist of a president, a vice
president, a recording secretary, and a treasurer, and past
president. ( In 1999 the Board of Directors decreed that the
Membership Chairperson would be a member of the Board of Directors
because of the importance of that job. This was not a by-law
change, as that was by required by these by-laws.)
-
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- Section Two
- The president will be the principal executive of this
corporation and shall exercise the usual functions of a presiding
officer. The president will serve as the Chairman of the Board,
and will preside over all meetings by the Board of Directors. The
president may sign all legal papers authorized by the Board of
Directors unless the authority is delegated by the Board or
- By-laws to someone else. The president shall appoint all
standing committees and shall give guidance and leadership in all
activities of the corporation.
- The vice president shall assume the duties and powers of the
president in
- the president's absence, inability, or refusal to perform his
or her duties. The vice president will assist the president in all
plans for activities to be presented to the Board of Directors.
The vice president shall be a member of the Board of Directors.
- The treasurer shall have the responsibility of the funds for
the corporation: shall prepare and sign all checks; receive and
give receipts for money due and payable to the corporation; and
deposit money in corporation's name in accordance with the
Articles of Incorporation and the By-laws. The treasurer will make
a fiscal report to the Board of Director at each meeting. The
treasurer is a member of the Board of Directors.
- The secretary shall keep the minutes of all the meetings of
the Board of Directors, sees that all notices are given in
accordance with the By-laws or provided by law, and distribute
minutes to the Board members. The secretary shall send notices of
meetings and take care of all documents and papers of the
corporation and assist the president with correspondence. The
secretary is a member of the Board of Directors.
- The past president shall serve as advisor and have a vote as a
member of the Board of Directors.
- The corporation shall have state representatives. The representatives shall speak to and for the artists within their states on matters as directed by the Board of Directors or the president of the corporation. They are not members of the Board.
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- ARTICLE IV. MEMBERSHIP AND DUES
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- Section One
- Signature, Active, and Associate Membership in Southern
Watercolor Society is open only to residents of Alabama, Arkansas,
Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland,
Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and Washington, D. C.
or those who are members in good standing at the time of moving to
another area.
- There shall be five classes of membership:
- Associate Member, pays annual dues
- Active Member, pays annual dues
- Artist Signature Member, pays annual dues
- Patron or Friend, pays annual dues or donation of current dues
or more
- Life Member, Honorary, pays no dues
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- Section Two (members)
- An individual or business does not have to reside in the state
of Tennessee to hold membership in the organization.
- An Associate Member is an artist who wishes to belong to the
Southern Watercolor Society, but whose work has not yet been
accepted into a juried membership competitive exhibition.
- An Active Member is an artist whose work has been accepted in
one (1) or two (2) of the juried membership competitive
exhibitions of Southern Watercolor Society, but has not achieved
Signature status. The Active Member has voting privilege.
- An Artist Signature Member is one whose work has been accepted
into Three (3) juried membership competitive exhibitions of
Southern Watercolor Society. The acceptance must be in three
separate juried exhibitions, not one exhibition that has two or
three entries accepted. The Artist Signature Member has voting
privileges and has earned the right to the initials "SW" with
artist's signature on paintings. Acceptance in any other
membership category does not assign the rights to use the initials
"SW" in any official capacity in relation to this Corporation.
- A Patron or Friend is one who is not an artist but enjoys and
supports the activities of the Southern Watercolor Society. This
status is reserved for individuals and families, businesses or
corporations. A Friend contributes $25 to $99. A Patron is a donor
of $100 or more. The Patron or Friend has no voting privilege.
- A Life/ Honorary is a member who has exhibited in ten Annuals
or has been president. Life/ Honorary membership may be bestowed
upon any individual who in the eyes of the Board of Directors has
made a significant contribution to the visual arts. Nominations
may be made to any Board member at anytime during the year by the
membership at large. The nomination must be accompanied with a
brief statement of reasons, accomplishments of the individual, and
letters of
- recognition from two other sources. A Life Honorary member has
voting privilege.
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- Section Three (dues and discipline)
- 1. Dues shall be paid annually on or before January 1 of each
year and become delinquent as of
- March 1, of each year.
- 2. Nonpayment of dues within the calendar year terminates the
membership and Active or Artist Signature status,
- 3. To reinstate Active or Artist Signature membership, a
member must fulfill membership requirements again, or a member may
be reinstated by payment of the current year dues and any of the
past three years dues that are unpaid.
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- ARTICLE V. FISCAL AND LEGAL AUTHORITY
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- Section One (legal)
- The Board of Directors shall set the fiscal year for the
corporation. The Board shall determine and authorize the following
officers to sign legal documents and checks: the president and the
treasurer. Both signatures are required.
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- Section Two (fiscal)
- At the direction of the Board of Directors, the fiscal year
shall begin on JAN. 1 and shall end DEC. 31.
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- ARTICLE VI. AMENDMENTS
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- Section One
- The By-laws may be amended at any meeting of the Board of
Directors by a majority vote, a majority being more than one-half
(1/2) of the votes.
- Prior notice of the amendment must be sent to each Board
member two weeks before the next meeting of the Board by the
sponsoring Board member. Any member of the at large membership may
bring a proposal for consideration by the Board of a change in the
By-laws. This must be in writing and presented to a Board member
three (3) weeks before the Board meeting.
- Section Two
- The By-laws shall be reviewed by the Board of Directors
annually.
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- ARTICLE VII. MEETING OF MEMBERSHIP AND ELECTIONS
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- Section One (meeting of membership)
- The members shall meet once a year in conjunction with the
annual members' exhibition. This exhibit will be held each year at
the direction of the Board of Directors.
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- Section Two (elections)
- Elections will be held biennially at the annual members
meeting. Members in good standing may vote from a list of
candidates supplied by a nominating committee.
- Members will be given the opportunity to nominate other
candidates from the floor by the president who shall preside over
the meeting.
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- Section Three
- Simplified parliamentary procedure will be followed. Adequate
minutes will be kept by the secretary.
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- ARTICLE VIll . COMMITTEES
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- The organization of various committees shall be the
responsibility of the Board of Directors and the president.
- Membership shall be a committee whose duty it is to keep the
Board informed on ways to increase the membership of the
organization. This committee will work with the Exhibition
committee and shall make recommendation for membership drives. A
Board member will chair this committee.
- Exhibition shall be a committee whose duty it is to make
arrangements for the annual members' competitive exhibition and
meeting held in on a date specified by the Board of Directors of
each year, The president shall chair this committee and may
request members at large to serve on the following: prospectus,
invitations, catalog, reception, program, banquet
- Public Relations and Information shall be a committee whose
duty it is to make recommendations to the Board on ways to promote
the corporation. Prepare news releases for the news media. Be
responsible for a newsletter concerning activities and membership
accomplishments. The Public Relations and Information Committee
shall set the number of times the newsletter will be published in
any given year. The committee will be responsible for maintaining
an accurate budget. The committee shall be member of the
Exhibition committee. The Historian will be a member of this
committee. This individual may be a member at large who will
compile all events into a meaningful history of the Southern
Watercolor Society.
- Social shall be a committee whose responsibility it will be to
plan for the reception and banquet at the yearly meeting of the
membership and exhibition.
- ARTICLE IX. EXHIBITS
- Section One (juried exhibition)
The corporation shall have a juried exhibit annually. An exhibition fee shall be set by the Board of Directors.
Section Two ( juror)
The juror shall be outside the membership and outside the membership area as stated in Article IV Section 1. The Juror and the place of exhibition for the following year shall be announced to the membership at the annual meeting.
Section Three (president and exhibit chair, exhibit option)
The president and the exhibit chairperson shall have the right to exhibit one piece, not in competition, at the annual exhibit following all other rules in the prospectus. This right does not preclude the option of entering the competition if desired.
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- ARTICLE X. STATUS OF CORPORATION
- The corporation is a nonprofit organization created under and
pursuant to the provisions of the law of the State of Tennessee.
The corporation is organized and operated exclusively for
nonprofit purposes.
-
- Section One (income)
- No part of its net earnings of the corporation shall be to the
benefit of, or be distributable to, its members, directors,
officers or other private persons except that the corporation
shall be authorized and empowered to pay reasonable compensation
for services rendered.
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- Section Two (legislative or political activities)
- No substantial part of the activities of the corporation shall
be carrying on of propaganda or otherwise attempting to influence
legislation and the corporation shall not participate in or
intervene (including the publishing of distribution of statements)
in any political campaign an behalf of any candidate for public
office.
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- Section Three (operational limitations)
- Notwithstanding any other provision of these articles, the
corporation shall not carry on any other activities not permitted
to be carried on (a) by a corporation exempt from Federal Income
Tax under Section 501 (c) (3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954
(or the corresponding provision of any future United States
Internal Revenue Law, or (b) by a corporation, contributions to
which are deductible under Section 170 (c) (2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1954, or the corresponding provision of any future
United States Internal Revenue Law.
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- Section Four (dissolution clause)
- Upon the dissolution of the corporation, the Board of
Directors shall, after paying or making provisions for the payment
of all of the liabilities of the corporation, dispose of all the
assets of the corporation exclusively for the purposes of the
corporation in such manner, or to such organization or
organizations organized and operated exclusively for charitable,
educational, religious, or scientific purposes as shall at the
time qualify as an exempt organization or organizations under
Section 501 (c) (3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (or
corresponding provision of any future United States Internal
Revenue Law), as the Board of Directors shall determine. Any such
assets not so disposed of shall be disposed of by the Circuit
Court of the county in which the principal office of the
corporation is then located, exclusively for such purposes or to
such organization or organizations, as said Court shall determine,
which are organized and operated exclusively for such purposes.
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