Stephen T. Johnson
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Stephen T. Johnson, Artist, 840 Delaware Street, Suite 5, Lawrence, KS.
05/05/2026
The other night, I stepped outside on a quiet stretch of my neighborhood and felt like I walked onto a film set. A green glowing streetlamp lined up directly with the moon above, nothing staged, it just was.
In my brief video, the clouds move in a way that makes the moon feel like it’s traveling, almost like an orbiting globe drifting somewhere beyond the frame. I added a bit of sound to hold onto the feeling. Curious what it feels like to you?
04/29/2026
Looking forward to the Free State Book Festival this Sunday, May 3rd — an afternoon of creative voices, live music, good food and beer, and plenty of conversation.😃
03/04/2026
Art finds its way forward through families, teachers, and communities. And so, I’m grateful to be included in this thoughtful article by Bob Luder in Lawrence Business Magazine and thankful to publishers Ann Frame Hertzog and Steven Hertzog for their continued commitment to celebrating artists and creative life in our community.
The article traces three generations of art in my family from my grandfather, J. Theodore Johnson, to my father, Ted, and the path it helped shape for me as an artist and teacher.
I'm honored to be part of such a vibrant creative community and grateful to carry forward a tradition that began long before me.☺️
01/21/2026
This week’s LBM Radio Show guest is…
Artist Stephen Johnson!
Be sure to tune in to F.M. 101.7 and 1320 KLWN at 9 a.m. on Thursday morning.
No radio access during our show? Listen through this link: https://tinyurl.com/Lbmradioshow
05/31/2025
Revisiting this fun time on a talkshow.
Stephen T. Johnson on "The Not So Late Show" with Host Mike Anderson, 2012 Interview with Stephen T. Johnson about his various children's books in this lighthearted yet informational television program called "The Not So LATE SHOW" ...
04/16/2025
Final week to view my exhibit at the National Museum of Toys & Miniatures in Kansas City! On view are my latest "Literal Abstractions" and various children's books. (PS these works will be for sale once back at my studio. DM to inquire😁) https://toyandminiaturemuseum.org/event/art-of-the-imagination-case/
02/28/2025
Artist Stephen T. Johnson extends family’s legacy in new, three-generation show In new exhibition opening Feb. 28 at the Cider Gallery, School of Architecture & Design lecturer Stephen T. Johnson opens a multigenerational show.
01/27/2025
Just found this lovely photo of our family unit taken by Saralyn Reece Hardy in 2022 at the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art during my exhibition “In the Academic Tradition, Connections between the Artist’s Work and his Art Collection.” Missing Big D in the center.😔 His drawing is the seated male rendered in conté crayon on tan paper above my sister Anne.
12/23/2024
With my recent post finding of glass mosaics remnants in my studio, and thinking about my Dad with his mosaic-like plaid shirts and kaleidoscope vision of all things, here is my father engaging with the installers from Mayer of Munich, Germany during the installation of my mosaic murals at the Lenexa City Center Library in 2019. Can you find him at the opening in image 3? Plus, a few details... He was such a magnificent supporter of my art and vision. ❤️
12/23/2024
Organizing my studio, I came upon this joyous box of extra mosaics from my murals at the Lenexa City Center Library . .
12/20/2024
Almost three month ago, our beloved father and husband to our mom Mary, passed peacefully in the quiet moments of dawn. We are so grateful that he was able to spend his final days at home with his immediate family supported by so many dear friends.
In honor of his brilliant mind and his beautiful soul, we’d like to imagine that he is now engaged in Socratic dialogues revolving around a wide spectrum of ideas and philosophies, located on a campus somewhere among the stars in the ever-expanding universe. And perhaps too, that a newly formed star up there in the nighttime sky tonight, might just be his twinkling, bright blue eyes, shining down on all of us with love, light, and joy.
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John Theodore Johnson, Jr. Obituary
A glorious mind and a beautiful, gentle soul has now passed onwards to the great halls of the Greek Gods who, we hope, will find Ted’s infinite and playful associations about everything from high-minded classics to the everyday mundane, truly a “hoot!” (one of Ted’s favorite words).
J. Theodore "Ted" Johnson Jr. passed away peacefully at his home on September 29, 2024, with his wife and children nearby. Ted was born on June 8, 1936, in New York City to Barbara Salmon and J. Theodore Johnson. Ted’s father, a noted artist and Guggenheim Fellow, informed his exploration of his artistic talents and interest in art, language and French culture. He spent his early years in Minneapolis, MN until the family moved to San José, CA in the early 1940s. Ted graduated from Fremont High School and graduated with great distinction and Honors in French from San José State College in 1958.
Ted received a Fulbright scholarship and studied at the Centre Médiéval at the University of Poitiers, France from 1958-1959. The following year he was a Fulbright lecturer at the University of Poitiers. Ted received his Master's in French at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1961, the same year he met his future wife Mary Greenwood, a fellow PhD student. They met sorting slides of France for the French Club. Ted and Mary were married in June 1962 in Woodmere, NY. Ted received his PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1964 and was hired as Assistant Professor of French at Princeton University, NJ, where he taught from 1964-1968.
In 1968, Ted and Mary with their children, Stephen and Anne, moved to Lawrence, KS, where Ted was hired as an Associate Professor of French from 1968-1975, then Chair of the Department of French and Italian from 1969-1971, and Professor of French from 1975 to 2001.
From 1972 to 1974, Ted directed the KU Junior Year Abroad Program in Bordeaux and the Johnsons lived in France, residing again in Bordeaux during the 1976-1977 academic year when Ted received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship to study the interrelationship of ideas surrounding the works of Marcel Proust and Claude Monet. He also co-directed the KU Summer Language Institute in Paris during the summers of 1981 and 1983.
Ted was a fervent supporter of the liberal arts and humanities, and conducted courses pro bono in the humanities as well as freshman honors tutorial programs at KU from 1975 to 2000. After retirement, he continued teaching the honors tutorial until 2010. He was a champion of the French Club and along with Mary hosted many dinner parties and events celebrating French culture over several decades, including their annual iconic Bastille Day party.
Teaching was one of Ted's greatest joys. His teaching evaluations garnered accolades far above the norm for they reflect a professor who imparted wisdom and courage, bravery and risk to his pupils. The outpouring of love and remembrances from his former students has been a true testament to his lasting impact and his rare gifts. Student evaluations often named Ted as the best professor they ever had while attending KU. Ted was awarded the H.O.P.E. award in 1992, an award for which he was most proud as it was student generated. He also received a Mortar Board Teaching Award for outstanding educator in 1975, and the Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1978.
Ted often commented, "A university deals with everything in the universe," and this was true of Ted himself. He possessed an encyclopedic mind that encompassed the night sky,
gardening, opera, literature, poetry, visual art, architecture, philosophy, linguistics, iconography, and all things Greek, in addition to many other interests. Ted’s deep appreciation for the KU campus and for Mount Oread fostered his annual Stop Day walking tours and early morning gatherings on the fall and spring equinoxes. A “quintessential Ted” highlight was observing the equinox sunrise transform a perfectly aligned manhole cover on 14th Street into a golden orb of delight. His Socratic approach planted new ways of seeing the world in the minds of those fortunate to experience the wonder of his imaginative associations and profound insights.
Ted was the founding editor of the Proust Research Association Newsletter from 1969 to 1988, the Assistant Editor of the French Review from 1968 to 1983, and authored numerous publications and gave countless presentations to groups both in the United States and in France. His newsletter was a labor of love and was appreciated by colleagues and fellow Proustians worldwide.
Ted was a member of Mid-America Mensa and his "Theodore Talks," an online Mensa lecture series named in his honor, has been viewed in 49 states and 10 foreign countries. In the 1980s, Ted co-founded a local life drawing group whose camaraderie and pleasant repartee he greatly enjoyed. Most recently, Ted was preparing an article concerning the painting An Idyll (Pastoral Landscape) in the Spencer Art Museum of Art by the Baroque artist Claude Lorrain, and Lorrain's connection to Galileo and the academic tradition.
Ted was immensely proud of his children, Anne and Stephen. He championed their personal development and professional accomplishments from childhood onward with unreserved enthusiasm, and would often expound upon their unique sense of style and grace with a delighted twinkle in his eye. He spoke admiringly of their kind and compassionate interactions
with others, character qualities he found profoundly beautiful.
During the past few decades of retirement, Ted and his dear wife Mary of 62 years traveled the world enjoying the rich cultures of Europe, Asia, Central, and South America. They relished spending quiet moments together sitting peacefully at a café in a foreign land capturing the local scenery in watercolor. Back in Lawrence, they would recreate the same romantic flavor of travel in their own home with food and guests, always celebrating the present moment.
Ted left an indelible mark on friends, students, and all those with an open mind and heart by engaging in lively and memorable exchanges of ideas. In his gentle, improvisational manner, Ted nurtured new perceptions and interrelationships concerning a multitude of diverse topics. He freely offered this to all takers, expanding their view of the world and sense of creative potential and of shared humanness. He did this with sheer love and joy, and will be deeply missed by all who knew him.
Ted Johnson is survived by his wife Mary Greenwood Johnson and their Irish Setter Ruddy of the home; his son Stephen Johnson (Lawrence); his daughter Anne Johnson and husband Chris Hepp (Lawrence); granddaughters Sophia Johnson (Brooklyn, NY) and Emma Johnson (Lawrence); and their mother Debbie Goldberg (Lawrence); step-granddaughter Mikaela Gordon Hepp (West Palm Beach, FL); sister-in-law Jenny Johnson (Santa Cruz, CA); brother-in-law Bill Greenwood and wife Cathleen (Dunedin, FL); and numerous nieces, nephews, and friends both in the U.S. and Europe. Special thanks go to our wonderful caregiver friends, Heather Lambert and Tia Weathers.
A celebration of life for Ted will be held at the spring equinox and an exhibition of his life drawings will be held at the Cider Gallery in March. Ted’s archives will soon be housed and available for research at KU. The family welcomes donations to the Ted Johnson Interrelations of the Humanities and the Arts award .org/tedjohnson.
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840 Delaware Street, Suite 5
Lawrence, KS
66044