About

Stephen Johnson is a highly versatile contemporary American artist whose visually arresting and conceptually rich body of work forges connections between words, objects and ideas.  His art spans a broad range of concepts, contexts and mediums including painting, collage, drawing, sculpture and installations and can be seen in museum and gallery exhibitions, site-specific public art commissions, and through his original award-winning children’s books for which he adds a middle initial “T” to his name.

Much of Johnson’s work is characterized by an interest in the alphabet and language, which began with his book Alphabet City, a Caldecott Honor and New York Times Best Illustrated Book of the Year. His most recent engagement with the alphabet is his ongoing series of “literal abstractions” which are the subject of his latest book A is for Art: An Abstract Alphabet, published by Simon & Schuster, available in stores nationwide on September 9th, 2008.

Johnson’s drawings and paintings are in numerous private and permanent collections, including the National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. and the New Britain Museum of Art, Connecticut.  Solo exhibitions of his work have been featured at the Memorial Art Gallery at the University of Rochester, New York; the Katonah Museum of Art, New York; and the Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas.  Among his public art is a mosaic mural at the DeKalb Avenue subway station in Brooklyn, New York and a 70-foot mural planned for 2009 in Los Angeles, California.