• THE ARTIST
  • EXHIBITION INFO
  • GALLERY

Contact: johnsdstudio@gmail.com | 928.221.9167

Resumé

View my resumé, Coming Soon.

Links

BROOKLYN MUSEUM

LANNING GALLERY

PEIPER-RIEGRAF COLLECTION

TURQUOISE TORTOISE GALLERY

Biography

David Johns is a Diné painter from the Navajo Nation, Arizona, United States. He was born near Seba Delkai, a remote desert region of northern Arizona. As a child, David spent many hours with his grandmother herding sheep through their land. During these years, she passed on to David the teachings her grandparents had given to her. She taught him how to respect and care for the land, plants and animals who enable the Diné to live, and told him many of the stories that explain how the Diné came to be and where his parents clans originated. David received formal training in fine arts from Northern Arizona University, earning a Bachelor's Degree in 1982. In 1997, he was awarded an honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters from Northern Arizona University.

By the time he was five years old, David viewed the world through the eyes of an artist, and he started selling portraits and landscapes while still in high school. His work combines his formal training with the traditional teachings he learned as a child and the Diné philosophy of life by which he lives. The symmetry of David's paintings reflect this harmony and balance; the colors and textures he creates reflect the beauty of the land from which he comes. His abstract paintings capture life's subtle phenomena such as the sunlight at different times of the day or the emotions brought by each of the four seasons.

In 1987, David was approached by long-time mentor Lovina Ohl and Albert Wareing to paint a mural on the dome of Concord Place. The mural covered thirty-six feet in diameter and rose 50 feet in the air, and took 18 months to paint. The mural depicts native peoples in all four directions, presenting indigenous designs and symbols, and portraits of great leaders such as Crazy Horse and Quanah Parker. Noted author N. Scott Momaday wrote of his work at Concord Place, "David Johns is a seer, and he comes very honestly by that gift. In his remarkable artwork, he enables us to see as well. His gift becomes our gift. Here is the essential spirit of creation."