In memoriam
On March 4, 2022, Frank Sanje Elliott passed away peacefully just fifteen days after his 89th birthday.
Born Frank Lee Elliott on February 17, 1933 in Centralia Washington, Sanje grew up in Portland, Oregon. He attended Laurelhurst Grade School, Grant High School and Lewis & Clark College. Artistically inspired by his mother, an art and music teacher, Sanje was destined for a creative life. He made art and played music throughout high school, and in his junior year, formed his own eight-piece band.
While at Lewis & Clark, he considered a career in commercial art. But among the tall firs on the campus, Sanje had an epiphany, as he describes it, questioning all his assumptions and even the basis of his faith. At that moment, he pledged to follow his true path and to direct his creative energies toward giving to the world. Rather than going into commercial art, he would continue playing music and become a fine arts painter. He set off for Italy to study at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence.
Two years later he was living in Munich Germany, painting and supporting himself by playing saxophone with small jazz ensembles. From Germany he went to Australia and lived there for several years. On his return home, he experienced his first encounter with Buddhism at Daitokuji Monastery in Kyoto, Japan.
During the 1960s, Sanje painted large semi-abstract paintings, some as large as 8 x 12 feet, and found that his work was becoming more spiritual in content. In 1971, he left Portland and traveled around the world again, this time in search of a teacher in the Kagyu sect of Tibetan Buddhism. After a year in India, he returned to America and settled in the Bay Area of California where he began to paint thangkas in the style of Tibetan Buddhism.
To continue his study of thangka painting and to practice Buddhism, he lived in Kathmandu Nepal for two years from 1980 to 1982. After returning to San Francisco he moved to Boulder, Colorado in 1984 to teach at the Naropa Institute founded by Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche. In 1991, he returned to Portland and settled into a life of painting, teaching and playing music. Sanje was instrumental in the founding of the Kagyu Changchub Chuling (KCC) Tibetan Buddhist Center in Portland.
Frank Sanje Elliott is preceded in death by his older sister Pat in 2011; and brother-in-law, Jack Wood in 2013 and is survived by many loving friends.
A celebration of Sanje’s life is being planned for spring 2022. In lieu of flowers you may send donations to KCC.
Frank and Pat Elliott, 1936
19-year-old Frank Elliott on saxophone, 1952
Siena, Italy, 1956
Thank you for this! When I met Sanje he looked exactly like the photo at the top…playing a wooded flute and riding in a bicycle rickshaw as we passed him on our bicycle rickshaw. This was in Bengal, just south of Calcutta in the Spring on 1972. There are so many memories of Sanje over the last 50 years…but the photo of Sanje at the piano is so strong – he was at so many events and clubs – AND played for hours at our wedding on January 8, 1978! Thank you Sanje for all your giving, love and the loudest belly laugh ever!
Hi Paul- I’m glad you got tracked down. I don’t have your info any longer. We lost our dear dear friend but not the thousands of memories. Big hugs to you.
Pamela:
Glad we are connected…you were such a force and draw for him…he loved you and all your time together – as you well know! I am at [email protected] and we still live in Glen Park in SF…You?
I met Sanje in Dalhousie India, Oct 13, 1972. It was a gestational period of my life. We maintained a profound friendship communicating regularily, with only brief interludes, often weekly, since that time,. His laugh and smile were legendaty. In addition to founding KCC in Portland he also was responsible for founding Kagyu Droden Kunchab, 1973, in San Francisco. This was the first Kagyu Dharma Center in the USA. He was a signifigant figure in the Tibetan Buddhist community both here and in Asia. He was known and respected for his compassion wisdom and energy worldwide! With his passing it seems to me that the Moon has left the sky.