Lantz Museum

Lantz MuseumLantz MuseumLantz Museum

Lantz Museum

Lantz MuseumLantz MuseumLantz Museum
  • Home
  • House of Symphonies
  • Christopher Paul Lantz
  • Paul Valentine Lantz
  • Juanita Lantz-Goodwin
  • Join & Give
  • Sculptures at the Museum
  • More
    • Home
    • House of Symphonies
    • Christopher Paul Lantz
    • Paul Valentine Lantz
    • Juanita Lantz-Goodwin
    • Join & Give
    • Sculptures at the Museum
  • Home
  • House of Symphonies
  • Christopher Paul Lantz
  • Paul Valentine Lantz
  • Juanita Lantz-Goodwin
  • Join & Give
  • Sculptures at the Museum

Juanita

The woman who had to be an artist

Juanita Donnell married Paul Lantz a painter and meet other painters.  She encouraged her son Christopher Lantz to be an artist, however he choose music first painting second. 

NY Times 1940

NY TIMES 1940

During the Great Depression, Juanita and Paul Lantz lived at the La Fonda Hotel, Santa Fe, NM as resident artists. In 1936 for room and board where Christopher Lantz was born.  Juanita  painted on everything she could, window glass, stair ways, door frames to paintings on furniture. Paul Lantz painted portraits and  large mural paintings.


History of the La Fonda Hotel

Come Visit Santa Fe, New Mexico

See the La Fonda to feel my presence in the painted windows and door frames. Then come up to the House of Symphonies to see Christopher Lantz's paintings and my grand-children's art. Find your own muse on a walk along the mesa cliffs. 

La Fonda Hotel

Come Visit Santa Fe, New Mexico

"Juanita Donnell Lantz Leighton Goodwin grew up in Texas and eastern New Mexico.  At one time she was married to Paul Lantz and assisted him with the paintings he created in the La Fonda Hotel in Santa Fe.  She later married Fred Leighton, an importer, and Walter Goodwin of Santa Fe and continued to paint all her life.  She worked on twenty-seven ceiling decorations with John Jellicoe for the Raton Carnegie Library during the New Deal era but they were later demolished when the building was destroyed to reroute the highway.  Conducting art classes for the Hispanic children of Roswell was another activity she engaged in as the result of New Deal funds.  She died in Tucumcari, Arizona, below Tubac, in 1969."

Treasures on New Mexico Trails, pg 238

Join Us

Help Our Cause

Your support and contributions will enable us to meet our goals and fund our mission.

Donate

Connect With Us

Lantz Museum

Ojo De La Vaca Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87508, United States

9729716794

Copyright © 2025 Lantz Museum - All Rights Reserved.

Powered by

This website uses cookies.

We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.

Accept