At the MacNaughton
home in Sandhurst last weekend artist Ray “Padre”
Johnson unveiled his character portrait of safari
organizer Izak Barnard and presented it to him
before an appreciative audience of wildlife and
conservation organization members.
Speaking in a soft mid west drawl Padre first
paid tribute to the exceptional experience and
deeply caring understanding for nature of the
man who had been his host in Botswana last year.
(“Here was a man
who knows his territory”).
The drawing, he explained “Juxtaposed a
lion and an elephant show two major facets of
Barnard’s character: a true leader with
powerful memory for every corner of Kalahari and
Okavango Swamps and a rugged personality, loaded
with wit. For me he is also a ‘historical’
Afrikaner,” added Padre.
Padre himself is more
than an artist. An ordained Lutheran priest
and medical doctor he served in both capacities
in Vietnam where he was wounded three times during
a fierce engagement in the Mekong Delta that left
him the only officer alive. (He later wrote a
book about this experience).
Padre often takes time off from his other adventures
to work as a simple ranch hand and this has inspired
many of his paintings of horsemen, some of which
are the collection of King, Gustav of Sweden.
His next appointment is to present a portrait
of Ronald Reagan to the American president, commissioned
by members of Congress; and then he’s off
on a painting tour which will take him as far
as Mongolia.