James
C. Christensen
Inspired by the world's myths, fables and tales of imagination,
James C. Christensen wants his work to add up to more than a
beautiful-if sometimes "curious" looking work of art.
Having taught art professionally for over 20 years, he likes
to think of the world as his classroom. His hope is that through
whatever he creates-be it a porcelain, fine art print or book-he
can convey a message, inspiration or a simple laugh. He believes
that teaching people to use their imagination helps us find
solutions to sooth the stresses of everyday life-or get a little
lift to help us keep going. In short: all things are possible
when you share Christensen's philosophy that "Believing
is Seeing."
Christensen was born in 1942 and raised in Culver City, California.
He studied painting at Brigham Young University and, for a
while, the University of California at Los Angeles before
finishing his formal education at BYU. Since then, he has
had one-man shows in the West and the Northeast and his work
is prized in collections throughout the U.S. and Europe.
The artist has been commissioned by both Time/Life Books
and Omni to create illustrations for their publications and
his work has appeared in the prestigious American Illustration
Annual and Japan's Outstanding American Illustrators. Christensen
has also won all the professional art honors the World Science
Fiction Convention can bestow, as well as multiple Chesley
Awards from the Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy
Artists. Christensen's fine art now appears as works of art
in porcelain from The Greenwich Workshop® Collection,
artist-inspired products such as note cards, silk ties and
several books: A Journey of the Imagination (1994), the adventure
fantasy Voyage of the Basset-adapted for television by Hallmark's
Odyssey Channel as the Voyage of the Unicorn, Rhymes &
Reasons (1997), Parables (written by Robert Millet, 1999),
The Personal Illumination Series and The Personal Illumination
Journal (2000), a series of interactive journals and A Shakespeare
Sketchbook (2001).
|