JD
Challenger was born in Oklahoma with a creative fire that
first began to smolder when he was a very young child. After
moving to Taos, New Mexico, Challenger enjoyed success as
an artist painting landscapes. Privately, he continued to
draw and paint as he was learning about Native
Americans.
He was reluctant to show his paintings in public for fear
of offending a people he greatly admired. Working in oils
and acrylics on canvas, as well as watercolor, his style
continued to emerge and his passion grew.
Upon
witnessing a Ghost Dance ceremony being filmed for a movie,
Challenger came face to face with his mission in life. "As
I stood there watching the chanting and the dancing, I knew
what I wanted to paint... nothing had ever been clearer."
His wife, Denise, encouraged him to show his work to his
Native American friends, one of whom was a holy man. When
he did so, he received their blessing and was told, "There
has to be a messenger and he doesn't have to be one of our
People. The Creator chooses His own messengers. Your path
is to tell our story and educate people about the past and
about what is still happening today." Challenger takes
his role seriously, but modestly declines credit for his
remarkable gifts. "The thing I do best is paint. I
prefer to look at it as 'not me' doing it, I'm just the
instrument... The Creator, the brush, the paint, and then
me.
JD
Challenger paints the story of a people rich in heritage
and traditions; stories sometimes poignant, often angry...
but always powerful and demanding to be told. Each portrait
speaks its own truth. Challenger is the vessel that paints
that truth.