|


























Do you need to adjust your
monitor?
Contents © 2000-2004 John Farnsworth
unless otherwise noted.
All items offered subject to prior sale.
| |
|
BIOGRAPHY
|
|
|
|
|
I
was born in Williams, Arizona, on March 4, 1941. My father was an engineer on the Santa Fe
Railroad. My grandfather and uncles all worked for the railroad. My
maternal grandfather, and, later my step-father, and his father were
loggers and sawmill workers. So I grew up in towns along the railroad,
and in the logging camps of Northern Arizona.
|
|
Santa Fe Gallup
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When
I was nine years old, my mother and new step-father took me with them to
visit Taos, New Mexico, her birthplace.
|
|

Taos Pueblo
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
was captivated by Taos pueblo,
and deeply impressed by my mother’s love of the area, which remained
strong, even though she had moved to Arizona as a child following the
death of her father. Frequently, as they strolled down the sidewalks of
Taos, my parents would realize I had vanished. Backtracking, they would
find me, entranced, in yet another art gallery.
|
|

Kit Carson Rd
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
still remember, as plainly as though it were happening now, standing in
one of those galleries, watching two men discuss a painting on the wall.
It suddenly occurred to me that, somehow, one of
the men
was the painting.
That the painting was
him. And that
I was one
too! It
was at that moment that I became an artist. I knew that whatever else I
might do from then on, I would always be an artist.
And I am
still an artist. I just look a lot different... |
|
 |
|
Cuzco, Peru Airport
February, 2005 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Following
High School, I started checking out painting books from the library, and
teaching myself to paint. The only books the Flagstaff library had on
painting at that time were those on Ted Kautzky, Rex Brandt, and Charles
M. Russell. I also had some old Arizona Highways articles on Maynard
Dixon and W.R. Leigh.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When
I joined the Army in 1959, I was stationed in Los Angeles, where I had
access to a broader field of study. I also attended occasional lectures
by Rex Brandt, Noel Quinn, and others. While in the service, I continued
to paint in watercolor, read all I could, and enrolled in the Famous
Artists’ Schools correspondence course. After a few lessons, I noticed
the recurring admonitions, in bold type: YOU LEARN TO PAINT BY PAINTING,
and YOU LEARN TO DRAW BY DRAWING. I
thought that was about the best advice I would ever get, so I dropped
the course, and have concentrated on drawing and painting ever since.
|
|
YOU
LEARN TO PAINT BY PAINTING
YOU
LEARN TO DRAW BY DRAWING
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
While
that was the end of my formal education, I soon discovered that I was in
love with learning, a fact I had lost sight of in high school. It was
also the beginning of a lifetime of study. I have studied the works and
techniques of the masters and the obscure, of the ancient and the
contemporary. I have learned from them all; even, in some cases, by
negative example. I am interested in all schools of painting, and all
periods.
I don’t believe that
any one school or period should render all
others irrelevant.
Whether the work in question is abstract
expressionist, minimalist, cowboy, surrealist, or impressionist, doesn’t
matter. The only important thing is whether the artist was true to his
own vision and how well he was able to realize it.
|
|
The
only important thing is whether the artist was true to his own vision.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When
I returned to Flagstaff, in 1962, I realized how much I had missed the
Navajo and Hopi influence in my life. I decided to learn all I could
about them, and began reading everything I could find on the subject. I
worked for a short time at Northland Press, where I met and worked with
Clay Lockett and Don Perceval on A NAVAJO SKETCH BOOK.
|
|

Paho
Perceval Book
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
moved to Phoenix, in 1965, where I ran a small private museum and Indian
shop, then, in 1965, to the Navajo Reservation, to work for Clarence
Wheeler in the trading post at Upper Greasewood, between Lukachukai and
Tsaile.
|
|
Greasewood
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In 1966,
back in Flagstaff, I
started working as Preparator at the Museum of Northern Arizona, under
Barton Wright, the Kachina expert, and
helping out in Clay Lockett’s shop at the museum.
|
|

Kiva Dance
Niman Dance
Stella
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I teamed up with Earl Carpenter, an excellent landscape painter from
Sedona, who had gone full-time a couple of years before. He was wanting
to paint Indians and Reservation scenes, and I wanted to learn all I
could from someone who was managing to support himself with his art.
Darned few were in those days. We camped and painted all over the Indian
country, and Earl persuaded me to try oils. We went out every time I
could get a day or more off.
|
|

Plein-aire painting in Northern Arizona |
|
|
|
|
|
|
At work, I was spending more time on my
sketches than on Museum business.
Ned
Danson, the Museum Director took me aside, one day, and said: "Your
mind really isn't on your work here, is it?" "No,
sir, " I answered. "You'd
really rather be painting, wouldn't you?" "Yes,
Sir." "Then
go paint. And if you stick with it, I think you might be great some
day."
|
|
"You'd
really rather be painting, wouldn't you?"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Well,
that’s all I needed to hear. I had been planning to quit in a few
months, anyway, as soon as I had my courage up, and enough money saved.
I’ve often wondered if I would ever have had the nerve, or
"enough" money.
I will be forever grateful to both Dr.
Danson
and Earl Carpenter. Without their encouragement, and Earl’s example, I
might never have made it.
|
|
Earl's Painting
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JOURNAL
ENTRY:
Saturday, September 7, 1968:
Up
early and hard at it. Did 2 oil on w/c paper characters. Came out
real good. Nice effect, too. Could sell very reasonably at $20-25
apiece, and still make wages. So I can paint more. Afternoon --
personal problems. By night very depressed. Financial problems
acute. $14.00 left. Rent overdue -- no prospects. Called Dr(?)
Gordon. He was supposed to call back but didn’t. Don’t know what
to do. Started a landscape on w/c paper -- oil. Bit of a fight.
|
|
Journal Page
Greasewood
Interior
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Soon
after, I met a Flagstaff man who agreed to stake me with a $650.00 check
if I would return to Greasewood for three months, and bring back enough
work to allow him first choice of at least ten 16" x 20" and
twenty 8" x 10" paintings.
|
|
Journal
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JOURNAL
ENTRY:
Sunday,
September 8, 1968:
Eugene
R. Gordon wrote out a check for $650.00 for 2 1/2 months at
Greasewood! Took 5 paintings and bear claw necklace as collateral.
Leaving next weekend. Close enough, huh? By hell, this is the
beginning I’ve dreamed of for years.
|
|
Greasewood
Journal Page
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
That
was the chance I’d been waiting for. Two and a half months with
nothing to do but paint. I borrowed my dad’s camper, which we set up
on stands behind the trading post. I spent every day painting,
sketching, and walking or riding the washes and hills surrounding the
trading post. In the evenings I painted, visited with Clarence Wheeler,
the trader, or went with my friend Johnson James to ceremonials, where I
sketched and watched in wide eyed wonder.
|
|

Peacho Begay
Camper
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
the end of the three months, Gordon took his choice of the paintings,
then said to me, on a Wednesday:
"We’re
having a Christmas party at our house on Friday evening. Just coffee and
cookies for some friends. I want you to have these paintings signed and
framed and ready for a showing then, because I have to recoup some of my
investment."
I
said "OK," and went to work. That Friday, with no publicity,
and after hiding all his favorites upstairs, we sold over $2,000.00
worth of paintings.
He
asked me what I wanted to do next. I told him I needed a year, at
$600.00 a month. By he following day, he had put together a group to
sponsor the year. They were to divide all I could produce at a monthly
meeting at which they drew straws for first choice, second choice, and
so on. I was on my way, and I’ve never looked back.
|
|

Greasewood Sketches
|
|
|
|
|
|
Painting in Oak Creek Canyon,
Arizona, 1969
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
opened my home in Flagstaff, by appointment, as a Studio/Gallery in
1969, and continued spending time during the summer months painting in
Taos.
|
|
Agassiz
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1970, I had my first, last, and only one man show at the dynamic Avis
Read's "Stables Gallery". The show was a success, but I
had grown accustomed, along with Earl Carpenter, to showing and selling
my own work directly to clients from Palm Springs to Tucson and Taos,
and seldom had enough pieces together at one time for a one man show.
|
|

Click for article
Mangino's
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1970, I moved to Pojoaque, near Santa Fe, and lived on the beautiful
estate of Louise Trigg McKinney, and began showing with Margaret Jamison
Gallery, when it was across from the La Fonda Hotel.
This was
followed by a move to Blue, Arizona, on the Blue River, along the
Arizona New Mexico border, at the end of a thirty five mile dirt road,
to live in an 1880s log cabin. My studio was an old bunk house on top of
a log barn. |
|
Pojoaque
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
I
painted in oils, mostly Indians, or Indian related subjects, until 1973,
when I put together another sponsorship which allowed me to paint in
Mexico for six months.
|
|

Zuñi Rain Maidens

La Paz en Guanajuato
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1974, I tried some pastels, and found them so intriguing that I worked
in them exclusively for about three years, but with the same subject
matter.
|
|

Zuñi Olla Maidens
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1977, I switched over to oil pastels, and quit painting Indian subjects.
I was feeling burned out, and as though I’d been run over by the
band-wagon of Indian-subject-popularity. It seemed the subject had become more
important than the work. I painted landscapes, people, still lifes, just
about everything for a year or so. I also did a few large Kachina faces
in oil pastel on canvas, which I found very satisfying.
|
|
Mtn. Lion Kachina
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1979, a friend, Herb Owens, then owner of Turf Paradise, and one of only
two or three clients who stuck with me when I quit painting Indians,
asked if I would paint a portrait of his race horse. I declined. Over
the next few days, though, the idea sort of worked on me, as did some
pressing bills. I called him up, and said,
"Alright,
if
you were serious; I’m ready."
Now,
I’d always thought that if you could draw a tree, you could draw a
house. If you could draw a house, you could draw a face, if you could
draw a face, you could draw, etc. So, a horse, contrary to popular
belief, couldn’t be any more difficult to draw than any thing else. I
was wrong. That damn horse portrait was the hardest thing I’d ever
tackled. I stayed with it, though, and when I was satisfied, I took it
to show Herb. He was delighted. He said, "That's how Believe a
Little used to look!"
|
|

Believe a Little
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
about that time, I decided to go back to oils, using just the primary
colors and white, as opposed to the hundred or so colors I was
accustomed to. I had seen a group of beautiful plein-air paintings by
Ned Jacob in Taos years before. Bettina Steinke told me Ned had painted
them using just the primaries. When I discovered what had happened to
the price of oil paints while I'd been working in dry media, I
suddenly got up the courage to finally try it myself. Also, I wanted to try some more horse paintings, just to
see if they really were that difficult. Remuda, my first effort sold
immediately to the first person who saw it.
|
|

Remuda

Rodeo Stock

Leather
|
|
|
|
 |
John and Poco, Santa Fe, 2005
©Vint Miller
www.barkingfishdesign.com |
|
|
|
|
One day, as I was passing the
Sheriff’s Posse rodeo grounds in Phoenix, I decided to stop and
photograph a group of horses. Somehow, though, I found myself in a pen
with a bunch of roping steers, photographing them instead, and wondering
what the heck I would ever do with all those photographs. I sure didn’t
intend to paint any cows. Before I new what was happening, I had done
two large paintings of steers, one of which won Best of Show and the
Purchase Award at the State Capitol Celebration of the Arts Exhibit. For
seven years, excepting commissions, I painted nothing but cattle and
horses. These were not western subjects, really, as I painted race
horses and Arabians as well as rodeo stock. In cattle, I found my
subjects at auctions, slaughter houses and rodeos. I was mostly
interested in subtle colors, textures, shapes, and arrangements of form.
|
|

Steers
True, I don't ride much anymore, but when I was young...

Ashfork, AZ, 1946 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
began showing with Suzanne Brown Gallery in 1979, at about the same time
that I started getting
commissions from large corporations like IBM , Texas Instruments, and
Arco Alaska.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1981, I became the first Arizona artist with a major work in the then
prestigious ARCO collection, in Los Angeles. In 1982, I was commissioned
by ARCO ALASKA to do a large painting of Caribou for their offices in Alaska. I
went to Anchorage, spent a week there, and flew with a local bush pilot,
200 miles out to a frozen lake where we landed in the middle of a herd
of caribou. He was the only pilot in town who would chance the flight,
due to weather conditions, and having to fly back through the mountains
after dark.
|
|
Phaedrus
Wejna
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1983 I was commissioned to do
a 20 by 30 foot mural for the Southern California headquarters of Wells Fargo
Bank in
Los Angeles. That took most of
a year, and was the most exciting thing I had ever done. (The building
was later sold, and the mural, painted on 20 individually stretched
linen canvases, now hangs in Phoenix’ Sky Harbor Airport.)
|
|


|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Six
weeks in Europe, in
1984, resulted in a series of paintings of horses
taken from Old Master paintings. This series continues, and has grown to
include dogs and still life as well as horses.
|
|
Gericault |
|
|
|
|

Delacroix's Scio Turk |
|
|
|
|
A visit to the caves at Font de Gaume,
near Lascaux, changed my thinking about art. Everything done since,
seemed to me to be merely vain strivings.
|
|

At the entrance...
Font de Gaume
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1986, I picked up some watercolors, just to play around, and suddenly
remembered that this had been my first love. My lungs were giving me
some trouble, and I had a lot of ideas that I hadn’t been getting to
in oil, so I switched to watercolor. Now I could paint anything,
anywhere. And I did. From trucks passing on the highway to fly fishing.
From Mexican markets to trains. From people to still lifes. And the
paint itself was thrilling.
|
|
Mercado San Blas

Sunset, West of Taos
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In 1987, I returned to Mexico, and to
Europe. And I took my watercolors with me.
|
|
Honeymoon Groups
|
|
|
|
Boca Chica
|
|
|
|
|
In
1994, I felt the need to again do some larger pieces. I turned to
acrylic on canvas and began, again, painting the large animal and
Kachina images. By combining the large, developed pieces with the
smaller , more spontaneous watercolors, I have found a satisfying and
productive balance in my work.
|
|
Kachinas
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
acrylics have finally given way to a return to working in oils, thanks
to advances in solvent replacement and some healing on my part.
Horses
remain a major part of my work; as they provide both a continual
challenge and a satisfying means of dealing with issues of importance to
me, such as composition, design, and the effects of light on the
subject.
For the
past few years I have been teaching two or three
workshops a year, usually through the
Taos Art School,
covering such diverse subjects as Computers for Artists, Beginning
Watercolor, Pastel Equus, the (Un)limited Palette, and Digital
Photography. These workshops have taken place in Taos, Santa Fe, Canyon
de Chelly, Spain and Peru. |
|
Still Lifes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In 2001,
on an extended visit to Mexico, I attended my first Charreada (Mexican
Rodeo) and was so taken by the color, costumes, and family oriented
events, that I immediately began a new ongoing series of paintings
depicting the Charro, or Mexican Cowboy.
|
|

PADRE, HIJO, HIJO
50" x 40" Oil on Canvas
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
SPACERBAR
|