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  • Frank Tenney Johnson
    Jun 26, 1874 - Jan 1, 1939
  • Frank Ellis of the SMS - Frank Tenney Johnson was born near Big Grove, Iowa and would become an important early 20th-century American Western artist. Raised on a farm on the old Overland Trail, he observed the western migration of people on horseback and in stage coaches and covered wagons. This exposure to the American West would prove to be an important influence and inspiration for Johnson as an artist and painter of the American West.
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Frank Ellis of the SMS
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  • Frank Ellis of the SMS

  • Frank Tenney Johnson
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  • 1929
    Oil on canvas

    During an interview with a Los Angeles radio station Johnson said, “Frank Ellis was riding for the SMS outfit at the time I was there. Just an old-time broken down cowpuncher, he called himself. One eye missing and some tell-tale scars on his leathery hide. Perhaps you know about the notorious Billy the Kid, who is claimed to have killed at least 21 men…. But far be it from me to have accused Frank Ellis of having been one of the outlaws that figured in the famous Lincoln County War—because he and I were good friends. I used him in several of my best paintings…”

    According to Harold McCracken in The Frank Tenney Johnson Book, “The sprawling SMS Ranch was named after Svante Magnus Swenson, who came to Texas from Sweden in 1838, and became a prosperous merchant in Richmond and Austin. He bought land grants on the West Texas frontier; and following the Civil War he opened a banking house in New York, engaging in international enterprises. In the late 1870s, his two sons began developing the family Texas land, becoming among the first to change from the old ways of longhorns to better stock. … At the time of Frank’s visit the SMS consisted of 280,000 acres covering parts of nine counties. “Frank Tenney Johnson’s stay at this big ranch was one of the most rewarding of his experiences. He had a great abundance of colorful material to sketch and photograph; and a good many of the SMS cowboys and horses appear in his later paintings.”

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Other paintings by Frank Tenney Johnson:

Ever Westward
Ever Westward
Fight in a Frontier Town
Fight in a Frontier Town
Girl And Cowboy
Girl And Cowboy
Gold Basin, Arizona
Gold Basin, Arizona
Frank Tenney JohnsonFrank Tenney Johnson was among the most reflective, introspective artists ever to paint the West. His love for the vanishing West of the cowboy was perhaps engendered in him by the close proximity of his birthplace near Council Bluffs, Iowa, to the Overland Trail. Even as a young man Johnson sensed that his career would have to be that of an artist of the Old West.

In 1895 Johnson made his way to New York, where he eventually studied at the Art Students League and with such fine art notables as J.H. Twachtman, Robert Henri and William Merritt Chase. His first professional work came to Johnson in the form of illustration commissions for Zane Grey novels and for Field and Stream and other periodicals. In many ways, however, his first professional work came in the form of a 1904 trip to Colorado and the Southwest, a trip that Johnson was to make many times in his life. The trip seemed to bring into focus an impression of the Old West that made Johnson famous.

Johnson was an excellent draftsman. He used the best materials available to an artist. As did others, Johnson painted with brush, knife and fingers. Above all, Johnson painted scenes of the West that were tableau-like; he rendered romantic, poetic Western genre scenes that differed entirely from the stop-action, narrative works of his contemporaries, C.M. Russell and Frederic Remington. Johnson painted scenes that reflected his preference for non-violent subjects, scenes that showed the cowboy, the Indian or the Spanish settler in a pastoral context. Among these quiet, philosophical canvases two types stand out: his paintings of horses and his night scenes.

Eventually, Johnson became a renowned artist with studios in Los Angeles; Cody, Wyoming; and New York. He was collected by major institutions including the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.; the Royal Palace in Copenhagen; and Fort Worth's Amon Carter Museum. In 1937 Johnson became an Academician of the National Academy of Design.

At the peak of his career Johnson's life came to an unusually unfortunate end. In December, 1938, Johnson attended a party, where he gave a social kiss to his hostess. Within two weeks' time, both were dead of spinal meningitis. In Frank Tenney Johnson's death, the United States lost one of the most accomplished artists ever to love the Old West.