George Johanson - painter, printmaker, and teacher - was born in
Seattle, studied art in Portland, Oregon, and lived in New York in the
early 1950s before returning to Portland. Whether in New York jazz clubs
and slaughterhouses, in Mexican villages, at the Rose Festival held each
year in Portland, at rehearsals of the Oregon Symphony, or in life
drawing sessions with artist friends, making images on paper has been a
basic element for Johanson throughout his life. The haunting power of
Johanson's art originates, almost always, in drawing.
Johanson's art is concerned with memory and recollection, dream and
fantasy, biography and autobiography, physical and imaginative
detachment yet sensual engagement. He is also the painter of fires that
break out in city buildings or spew from volcanoes, and he often sets
fire's rampage alongside human lassitude and seeming indifference.