About the artist
Donna’s art journey began as a young child.
“I grew up in Hawaii with a Japanese mother. I was always drawing and painting, even though we didn’t have much money. I decided to major in art at college, but when I got there, I found myself getting bored with the repetitious assignments and being told what to do. So I changed my major with a master’s degree in Deaf Education and taught deaf children for four years.”
“After I had my three sons, I was staying home, but I was looking for something that would stimulate my mind. I remember drawing and painting and majoring in art in college. I tried quilting, weaving and pottery of all kinds. I mainly just bought all the stuff and never made anything! Eventually, I took the weekend watercolour workshop, and that turned out to be what worked for me. I painted watercolour landscapes for about 15 years.”
From there, Donna began to sell paintings, work on commission, and display them in galleries. “I was good at figuring out what would sell,” she explains, “But I was repeating a lot of paintings just for the sales. After 15 years, it dawned on me that I wasn’t growing as an artist. I was painting what other people wanted me to paint, so I decided to quit.”
After this, Donna found herself feeling lost. “I didn’t realise I was in a depression,” she explains. “Eventually, I pulled myself out of the dark hole and started exploring more about myself and who I was about.”
Through journaling and reading books on creativity as well as about her native country of Japan, Donna found herself working again, changing from watercolour landscapes to painting more about her personal heritage as well as what she cares about.
Donna’s more recent works explore her half-Japanese, half caucasian culture. “When I changed from the watercolours. I actually went into some deep, thoughtful paintings dealing with my childhood and my identity, examining where I fit in,” she says.
A trip to Japan resulted in Donna including collages in her paintings. This evolved to become something she is now recognised for.