Born
near Big Grove, Iowa, Frank Tenney Johnson, became one of the most famous early
20th-century painters of Western genre.
He
was raised on a farm on the old Overland Trail where he observed western
migration of people on horseback, in stage coaches, and in covered
wagons. At age of 10, he moved with his family to Milwaukee, and he
apprenticed there to panorama painter F.W. Heine (1845-1921), whose specialty
was painting horses. From that time, Johnson was ever studying the horse
and became noted for his ability to portray it accurately. Then he
studied with Richard Lorenz, a member of the Society of Western Painters, and
he gave Johnson valuable techniques as well as great enthusiasm for the West.
Inheriting
a small amount of money allowed Johnson in 1895 to go to New York to study at
the Art Students League for five months. Then he returned to Milwaukee
and worked as a free-lance illustrator until he and his wife could afford to
return to New York, and this time he studied with John Twachtman, Robert Henri,
and William Merritt Chase.
In
1904, he went to the Rocky Mountains and Southwest for Field and Stream magazine, and this was a
life-changing trip in that he set his style and subject matter for the
remainder of his life. He especially learned to love the skies during the
day and at night, and one of his trademarks became his night scenes. To
achieve a certain luminosity, he carefully studied the skies in Maxfield
Parish's paintings. He was so successful in his Field and Stream assignment that he continued to
make many trips West including a 1912 visit to Arizona where he, on a
cross-country train trip, stayed several days at Winslow.
During
the 1920s, he settled in Alhambra, California and shared a studio with Clyde
Forsythe, and his easel paintings began to outsell his illustrations. He
did a series of murals in a famous Los Angeles movie house called the Cathy
Circle Theater. His painting technique to achieve textural effect was to
work quickly, using brushes, palette knife, and his fingers.
In
the 1930s, deciding to spend his summers away from Alhambra, Johnson built a
cabin and studio on the north fork of the Shoshone River in Wyoming, just
outside the east gate of Yellowstone Park. For seven years, from 1931 to
1938, he spent much time hiking in the park and painting scenes of its unique
landscapes.
It
has been written that he was a man who "represented the best in the Old
West." He was six feet two inches, handsome, virile and
admired. For one of his exhibits at the Grand Central Art Galleries at
the Biltmore Hotel in New York City, Amon Carter bought the entire
exhibition. Shortly afterwards, Johnson went to a dance in Los Angeles,
kissed a pretty girl and died the next morning (January 1, 1939) from
meningitis.
Source:
Peggy
and Harold Samuels, Encyclopedia
of Artists of the American West
Edan
Hughes, Artists
in California, 1786-1940
Michael
David Zellman, 300
Years of American Art
Peter
Hassrick, Drawn
to Yellowstone
(Courtesy of AskArt)
Back to Top