The Day

Diana Atwood Johnson, patron of arts, open space, dies

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

Old Lyme — Diana Atwood Johnson was remembered Wednesday as a “force” for open space and conservati­on, a staunch supporter of the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, and a mentor in the community.

Atwood Johnson died Monday at the age of 71 after a battle with myositis, an autoimmune disease. She led the town’s Open Space Commission as chairwoman and helped guide the developmen­t of the state’s latest open space plan.

Atwood Johnson was an advocate for open space on the local, state and national levels, and most, if not all, of the open space in the community has “her signature on it,” said Old Lyme First Selectwoma­n Bonnie Reemsnyder.

A native of Rochester, N.Y., and a graduate of Skidmore College, Atwood Johnson ran the Old Lyme Inn for 25 years until 2001 and was named Old Lyme’s Citizen of the Year in 2012. She was chair emerita of the Board of Trustees of the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts and had served as the board’s chairwoman from 1996 to 2003 and from 2010 to 2013, according to the college.

Atwood Johnson had been a mainstay of Lyme Academy, ever since the day founder Elisabeth Gordon Chandler approached her close friend and asked her to get involved, according to Todd Jokl, campus dean at Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts.

Atwood Johnson helped see Lyme Academy through its accreditat­ion and was instrument­al in the campus expansion. She spearheade­d the residentia­l component of the campus, with the 12 townhomes being a “direct result of her vision and leadership,” Jokl said.

She was also instrument­al, working alongside Stephen Tagliatela, the current chairman of the Board of Trustees, in the merger between Lyme Academy and the University of New Haven in 2014, Jokl said.

Each year, a Diana Atwood Johnson Leadership Award is given and will continue to be given to a student, he said.

“She has contribute­d both in spirit and financiall­y to the scholarshi­p of our students, and her role in this institutio­n is nothing short of transforma­tional and extraordin­ary,” Jokl said.

In 2014 Lyme Academy held an exhibition of Atwood Johnson’s photograph­y of wildlife and birds, including of the swallows in Old Lyme, called Bird’s Eye View.

Atwood Johnson was an avid birder and was very involved in the Connecticu­t Audubon Society’s EcoTravel program, said Andy Griswold, the director of the travel program and a good friend of Atwood Johnson’s. He said she was a strong supporter of the Audubon Society’s mission of environmen­tal education and conservati­on, and personally, she was very loving, supportive of everyone’s interests, and a consistent friend.

“She is a treasure,” said Old Lyme Selectwoma­n Mary Jo Nosal.

As the chairwoman of Old Lyme’s Open Space Commission, Atwood Johnson was the commission’s “driving force” and was particular­ly interested in protecting the natural habitats of animals and birds, said Peter Cable, who serves on the commission.

“She was just absolutely instrument­al in establishi­ng the open space areas that we have today,” Cable said.

Atwood Johnson also chaired the state’s Natural Heritage, Open Space & Watershed Land Acquisitio­n Review Board for 18 years.

Graham Stevens, office director of constituen­t affairs and land management for the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection, said that Atwood Johnson was a trailblaze­r in that she not only advocated for open space, but also placed a conservati­on easement over land she owned for conservati­on and scenic protection, at a time before the open space movement gained popularity.

“Not only was she one of the longest-serving, most impactful open space advocates in Connecticu­t, she also was quite a force, a pleasure to work with” who he said stood up to all for the benefit of open space preservati­on.

Amy Blaymore Paterson, executive director of the Connecticu­t Land Conservati­on Council, said that Atwood Johnson was an advocate for open space who listened to the opinions of others and thought about things very seriously.

“She put so much intellect and insight and experience into that review board,” Paterson said. “She was a fierce advocate and she did not back down from issues that she felt were important to advancing land conservati­on in the state.”

Paterson said Atwood Johnson was particular­ly effective in guiding the developmen­t of the latest version of the Green Plan, the state’s comprehens­ive open space plan.

The state DEEP’s Open Space & Watershed Land Acquisitio­n Grant Program’s photo contest was named in Atwood Johnson’s honor.

John Johnson, Atwood Johnson’s former husband, said he and Atwood Johnson traveled all over the world, but her favorite subject was right in her backyard in Old Lyme, where she would photograph wildlife, particular­ly birds.

Her love of nature and open space was lifelong, said Johnson. She used to tell the story from her childhood when she and her father, an avid trout fisherman, would go around northern New York state looking for the next trout stream.

Johnson said that she always knew what the right thing was to support, whether it was in politics, fundraisin­g for the Lyme Academy, her photograph­y, or his gallery in New London, where Atwood Johnson’s skill in photograph­y made her the leading artist.

“She was sagacious and wise,” Johnson said. “There was nobody like her.”

Atwood Johnson was also involved in politics and ran unsuccessf­ully against Mark Diebolt in 2004 in a Republican primary for the state Senate’s 20th District seat. Andrea Stillman, a Democrat, defeated Diebolt in the general election.

Mary Stone, who serves on the Old Lyme Open Space Commission, said she and Atwood Johnson were among the founders in 2001 of Voices for Good Government, a local, bipartisan group with the goal of seeking and promoting the most qualified and interested people in town government.

Stone said Atwood Johnson was always helping the town in many ways.

“I think Diana’s love for her town was boundless,” Stone said.

A memorial service is being planned for the spring.

 ??  ?? Diana Atwood Johnson at the Old Lyme Inn in a 1985 Day file photo.
Diana Atwood Johnson at the Old Lyme Inn in a 1985 Day file photo.
 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? In this 2011 Day file photo, Diana Atwood-Johnson, left, visits with Maritime artist John Stobart, center, and Debra Petke, right, president of Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, at a reception at The Gallery At Firehouse Square in New London.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY In this 2011 Day file photo, Diana Atwood-Johnson, left, visits with Maritime artist John Stobart, center, and Debra Petke, right, president of Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, at a reception at The Gallery At Firehouse Square in New London.

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