All Miller, Alfred Jacob 's Paintings
The Painting Names Are Sorted From A to Z


Choice ID Image  Paintings (From A to Z)       Details 
19436 Antoine Clement, The Great Hunter  Antoine Clement, The Great Hunter   1837 Oil on canvas Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore.
19435 Bear Bull, Chief of the Oglala Sioux  Bear Bull, Chief of the Oglala Sioux   1837 Watercolor on paper Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore.
41438 Crossing one of the Sources of the Colorado of the West,in the Mountains of the Windsl  Crossing one of the Sources of the Colorado of the West,in the Mountains of the Windsl   mk162 c.1837 9x7
41443 Elk Hunting in the Rocky Mountatins  Elk Hunting in the Rocky Mountatins   mk162 c.1837 Pencil with brown and gray washes on paper 8x7
19437 Encampment on Green River  Encampment on Green River   1837 Watercolor on paper Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha.
41441 Greeting the Trappers  Greeting the Trappers   mk162 1837 Watercolor on paper 6x9
41447 Indian Elopemetn  Indian Elopemetn   mk162 1852 Oil on canvas 30x36
41440 Indians Assembled in Grand Council to Hold a Talk  Indians Assembled in Grand Council to Hold a Talk   mk162 c.1837 Pencil and ink with gray wash on paper 8x10
41442 Indians Fording a River  Indians Fording a River   mk162 undated Watercolor on paper 4x6
31977 Interior of Fort Laramie  Interior of Fort Laramie   mk77 1858-60 Watercolor 11 5/8x14 1/8in
41445 Louis-Rocky Mountain Trapper  Louis-Rocky Mountain Trapper   mk162 undated Watercolor on paper 7x5
41444 Surround of Buffalo by Indians  Surround of Buffalo by Indians   mk162 c.1848-1858 Oil on canvas 30x44

Miller, Alfred Jacob
American Painter, 1810-1874 American painter. From 1831-2 he studied with the portrait painter Thomas Sully in Philadelphia, PA. In 1832 he went to France, where he studied in Paris at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He also visited Rome before returning to Baltimore, to open a portrait studio in 1834. Three years later Miller moved to New Orleans, LA, and was engaged by Captain William Drummond Stewart to accompany an expedition to the Rocky Mountains. The journey brought Miller into close contact with the American Indians, whose hunting and social customs he depicted in 200 watercolour sketches, and with the Far West fur trappers at their annual trading gatherings. He was one of the first artists to leave a detailed visual account of the life of the American mountain men (see WILD WEST AND FRONTIER ART). Miller's Rocky Mountain paintings are among the most romantic images of the American West ever created. His works are often panoramic and dramatic, yet he was equally adept at depicting charming, intimate scenes. His free, vigorous painting style brings to life both the American Indian and the rugged pioneer. Such paintings as the Lost Greenhorn

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