Education
Christensen was raised in Culver City, California, and attended University of California, Los Los Angeles He then moved to Utah to finish his higher education at Brigham Young University.
Christensen was raised in Culver City, California, and attended University of California, Los Los Angeles He then moved to Utah to finish his higher education at Brigham Young University.
Christensen says his inspirations are myths, fables, fantasies, and tales of imagination. He taught art for over 20 years at Brigham Young University until the late 1990s. He has had numerous showings of his work throughout the United States and has been commissioned by media companies to create artwork for their publications, such as Time-Life Books and Omni.
His artwork has been featured on the cover of Leading Edge issue #41, winning him the Chesley Award for cover artwork in 2002.
Christensen"s work has appeared in the American Illustration Annual and Japan"s Outstanding American Illustrators. Christensen appeared in an episode of American Broadcasting Company"s show Extreme Makeover: Home Edition in 2005.
The design team filmed a segment at his studio. The Greenwich Workshop donated a framed Court of the Faeries that Christensen presented to the family for the room as well.
His first book, A Journey of the Imagination: The Art of James Christensen, was printed in 1994 to great acclaim.
His second, Voyage of the Basset (October 1996), contains a frame story for a great deal of original work. His third book, Rhymes & Reasons, was published in May 1997. Christensen also illustrated A Shakespeare Sketchbook (May 2001) with text by Renwick Saint James.
Not employed in all his paintings, his trademark is a flying or floating fish, often on a leash.
Christensen"s book Voyage of the Basset was the source of controversy in 2006 when a resident of Bountiful, Utah, demanded that the book be removed from circulation from the young adult section at the Davis County Library in nearby Farmington, Utah. The book features fantasy artwork such as depictions of trolls, dragons and ogres.
Two images of mermaids and one of a sphinx-like creature feature partially or fully exposed breasts. Though the images are not sexual in nature, and as drawn, the breasts feature no nipples, Rod Jeppsen of the Citizens for Decency group said: "What we normally don"t consider pornography, a child may get sexually aroused by.
The question to me is not whether the book has a good story line, but does it sexually stimulate young boys?" The Davis County Library Board voted to keep the book in circulation in the young adult section on August 22, 2006.
He created a picture featuring a member of the family as a fairy.