Greg A. Robinson was born in 1957 and is a member of the Chinook Indian Nation located in Bay Center Washington. The Chinook Indian Nation is a confederation of the five most western tribes, the Lower Chinook, Clatsop, Willapa, Wahkiakum
Primarily self taught, Robinson has throughout his life had an affinity for wildlife and art, both of which guide his passion for making art. His past and current works in the traditional Chinookan art forms pays tribute to the Columbia River ancestors, to whom art, life, stories, and culture are strongly interrelated. Through his art and instruction he inspires younger generations of Chinookan artists in the region.
Robinson produces work in different mediums in the style of the Chinookan peoples of the middle to lower Columbia River and Willapa Bay. Working primarily in wood, large stone, bone and hide, he draws inspiration and technical knowledge from the study of ancient and contemporary works in private and museum collections, including the Portland Art Museum and the Burke Museum.
Robinson’s public art commissions are permanently on view at the Multnomah Falls National Scenic Park in Oregon and the Parkersville Historic Park in Camas, Washington, The pedestrian bridge in Portland OR, and at the Japanese Gardens in Portland OR.