Throughout the history of Western art, the notion of authenticity
has remained a central concern of art critics, historians, and
artists alike. Frank Tenney Johnson keenly grasped the importance
of blending veracity and poetry in his art. Throughout his career,
he strived to paint authentic, compelling images of an Old West
born of history and myth.
Johnson was born and raised on a farm near the historic Overland
Trail, which crossed the Missouri River at Council Bluffs, Iowa,
a few miles to the north. As a child, he heard old-timers’ stories
of the trail when it still teemed with long lines of prairie
schooners, stagecoaches, and herds of long-horned cattle. The
tales brought the West alive for the boy and etched indelible
impressions in his imagination.
Johnson’s family had left the farm and was living in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1891 when he began to study with Milwaukee
artist Richard Lorenz, who had developed his skill as a painter
of horses while studying in Europe, a specialty he passed along
to Johnson. A former Texas Ranger, Lorenz also passed along
fascinating stories of the Wild West, reinforcing Johnson’s
determination to “go out West and soak up its atmosphere.”
When he received a small inheritance in 1895, Borein hightailed
it, not to the West, but to New York City to study drawing at
the Art Students League. He worked intensely until his money
ran out, and then returned to Milwaukee. In 1902, he again went
to New York, this time to establish a studio and to take classes
at the New York School of Art with the two greatest American
art teachers of their time, William Merritt Chase and Robert
Henri. Years later, Johnson downplayed his formal training,
even claiming that he didn’t “get enough art education” to
hurt him. He did, however, get enough “art education” to
refine his natural talent, develop his artistic skill, and deeply
influence his approach to creating art.
Both Chase and Henri had studied in Europe and favored impressionist-influenced
realism. But more important than any particular style of painting
was their insistence that artists must know their subjects intimately,
must find their own way, and must learn from others. Johnson
took to heart Henri’s conviction that the most successful
artists were “absorbed in the civilization” they
portrayed in their work. By then he was already considering
himself a Western artist, and he grew even more determined to
make up for the fact that he was not a born Westerner and had
neither lived the cowboy life nor witnessed skirmishes during
the Indian Wars.
His chance came in 1904 when Field and Stream magazine
hired him to illustrate an article and paid his way west to
gather material. Johnson took advantage of this opportunity
to remain five months in Colorado and New Mexico. He worked
as a cowboy on a Colorado ranch, then went to New Mexico and
Arizona where he was fascinated by the Navajos he saw “at
their games, racing and selling horses . . . and dancing in
the moonlight.” Navajos and Navajo customs remained favorite
subjects.
Beginning in 1906, Johnson made regular trips west, particularly
to the Southwest and California. It was his usual practice to
sketch and photograph his subjects and to paint landscapes en
plein air while in the West then complete the paintings in his
New York studio. Cowboys (Dust Stained Riders) is an
outstanding example of this practice. Not only did he thrive
in the artistic milieu of the city, but it also was headquarters
to magazine and book publishers who gave Johnson ample work
as an illustrator. He enjoyed a successful career for more than
twenty years, illustrating magazine articles and western novels
whose authors were grateful for his talent. One author who wrote
to thank him for his drawings declared that “originality
is a jewel and you have it.”
Although he had exhibited at the prestigious National Academy
of Design since 1918 and showed his work successfully in commercial
galleries, it wasn’t until 1925 that he was able to quit
illustrating in order to paint full time. Freed from the bonds
of the New York publishing business, he gravitated west, eventually
buying a home in southern California. From then on he divided
his time between the two coasts.
Johnson’s career continued its upward course. Elected
an Associate of the National Academy of Design in 1929, in 1937,
he was elected a National Academician, a singular achievement
for a Western artist. Tragically, Johnson died on New Years
Day 1939, only days after contracting spinal meningitis from
a woman he kissed at a holiday party. The loss felt by his family,
friends, and patrons was tempered by the fact that at the time
of his death Johnson was at the pinnacle of his career, his
passionate love for the West undiminished.
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