Greg
Colfax was trained as an educator and in creative writing, with degrees
from both Western Washington University and the University of Washington.
He has taught both in the Native American Studies Program at Evergreen
State College and in elementary and high school at Neah Bay. He began
his training as a carver in 1978 under Art Thompson, George David, Steve
Brown, and Loren White. He has been described as an "artist, fisherman,
canoe company manager, poet and philosopher". Two of his pieces
are included in the traveling exhibition "Lost and Found Traditions,"
a drum, and an innovative bentwood whaler's box that was featured on
the cover of the exhibition catalogue.
In 1985 a twelve-foot figure of a woman drumming was carved by Greg
Colfax and Andy Wilbur-Peterson for the Native American Studies Program
at Evergreen State College in Olympia where it now stands. In addition,
Colfax was recently commissioned by the city of Tukwila to produce a
fifty-foot carved and painted cedar mural as a public art project for
Tukwila City Hall. Colfax has researched the collections at the Burke
Museum, Royal British Columbia Museum, and the Makah Cultural and Research
Center, and consults with Makah elders about the meaning and uses of
art objects and utensils. Today he is considered a master carver in
Neah Bay, working with apprentices. In addition to his many commissions
for original carvings, Colfax also restores old pieces.