Wine Label Artist

Camelot Cellars wine labels display the art of John Warden MacKenzie
Born in Albany, California in 1942, John’s family moved to Saudi Arabia when he was six years old and his Father went to work for the Arabian-American Oil Company. He began his artistic education in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. The drawing classes he took at that  time focused on subjects such as Bedouin tribal customs and animal studies. When it came time  for MacKenzie to enter high school, his parents sent him to Rome, Italy, and for the next three years he remained there, taking art classes at the Roman Forum, the American Academy of Art, and at the Vatican Museum in Vatican City.

Following high school, MacKenzie attended the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in  English literature with a minor in archeology. He had hoped to major in art, but was discouraged from doing so by his father. Putting aside his desire to be an artist for many years,  MacKenzie instead became a United States Customs Agent, working in Baltimore, Maryland and then in Columbus, New Mexico. He retired after twenty-nine years of service as a U. S.  Customs Inspector on the U.S./Mexico border in 1996, finally able to return to art as a full  time pursuit.

About 30 years ago, MacKenzie picked up his brushes and canvases again, painting whenever he got a chance.   He eventually went back to school to study watercolor and drawing at the University of Texas at El Paso and then apprenticed with Texas artist William Arthur Herring in 1998.

“Any artist’s first concern should be in giving. If he or she is truly gifted and their work merits attention, then it is all the more reason to be generous. The gift of talent, like the gift of life, was not asked for and is a mystery. They both leave us with a debt to repay.

Whatever an artist puts into society, he or she will eventually get back. The first, and maybe the best, reward happens in the studio when the work is completed. Alone, the artist looks upon a creation that amazes and fulfills his soul. A feeling comes over him or her of being a messenger whose hand was guided all the time by a power beyond our understanding.”
John Warden MacKenzie

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