
Recognized
as one of the leading members of the Anglo-American
art colony in Giverny, France, Richard Miller garnered
widespread international acclaim for his depictions
of women. A popular and highly influential teacher,
Miller also played an important role in the dissemination
of Impressionism in Southern California. His aesthetic,
distinguished by an emphasis on pattern, line, and bold
color contrasts, exemplifies the decorative direction
that Impressionism took during the early twentieth century.
A
native of St. Louis, Missouri, Miller studied at the
St. Louis School of Fine Arts from 1893 until 1897.
Following this, he worked briefly as an artist-reporter
for the St. Louis Post Dispatch. In 1899 he received
a scholarship to attend the Académie Julian in
Paris. There, Miller concentrated on the rendering of
the figure, refining his draftsmanship under the direction
of the academic painters Jean Paul Laurens and Benjamin
Constant.
In
1901, his studies at Julian's completed, Miller began
teaching at a rival art school, the Académie
Colarossi. During this period, Miller specialized in
portraits and Dutch peasant subjects as well as depictions
of attractive women amidst luxurious surroundings. Stylistically,
he favored a muted, tonal palette and firm draftsmanship.
Miller was also inspired by the prevailing interest
in Japonisme; his studio was filled with an ample collection
of kimonos, parasols, fans, ceramics, and other accouterments.
Around 1905, he produced a series of night scenes, focusing
on cafe life and views of Parisian boulevards.
Miller
won gold medals at the Paris Salons of 1901 and 1904.
In 1905, he received a medal at the Liege World's Fair
and a year later, he was appointed a Knight of the French
Legion of Honor. His reputation in France was further
enhanced in 1907, when his Vielle Hollandaise was purchased
by the French government for the Luxembourg Museum.
During
the early 1900s, Miller began conducting summer painting
classes in Giverny. Located about thirty miles northwest
of Paris, the village had been a popular gathering place
for American artists since the late 1880s. The majority
of Miller's students were from Mary Wheeler's school
in Providence, Rhode Island. He also taught occasionally
in St. Jean du Doight in Brittany; however, he spent
the majority of his time in Giverny.
Miller
continued his affiliation with the Académie Colarossi
until 1906. Although his precise chronological development
has yet to be established, he appears to have turned
to Impressionism during that same year. As was the case
with other many of his fellow American Givernois, such
as Frederick Frieseke, Guy Rose, Lawton Parker, and
Louis Ritman. Miller portrayed elegant young women in
quiet, sun-dappled interiors or in lush flower gardens.
Contemporary critics soon identified Miller and Frieseke
as the foremost members of the Giverny colony and compared
their work accordingly. Commentators noted that although
the two men shared the same subject matter, and often
the same models and props, Miller's work was distinguished
by its monumentality, its strong sense of design, and
its vivid color contrasts. In Miller's view, "art's
mission . . . [was] not literary, the telling of a story,
but decorative, the conveying of a pleasant optical
sensation." 1
In
1909, both Miller and Frieseke had rooms devoted to
their work at the Venice Biennale. In December of 1910,
Miller, Frieseke, Guy Rose, and Lawton Parker exhibited
together at New York's Madison Gallery and were subsequently
identified in the press as the "Giverny Group."
In one review, the noted critic James Huneker described
Miller's interiors as "cool and graceful,"
his women "delicate and mysterious." 2
Miller
remained in Giverny until late 1914, when the dangers
imposed by the first world war forced him to return
to America. He lived briefly in New York City and then
in St. Louis before settling in Pasadena, California
in 1916. During the next two years, Miller taught and
gave criticism at the Stickney Memorial School of Art
and in so doing played an important role in the dissemination
of Impressionist precepts throughout Southern California.
During this period, he continued to paint female figures
in sun-dappled settings, often working in the formal
gardens adjacent to the home and studio of Mrs. Adelbert
Fenyes, one of his students at the Stickley School.
In 1918, Miller moved permanently to Provincetown, Massachusetts,
where he was one of the more prominent figures in the
local artists' colony. From 1919 until 1923, he painted
a series of murals for the State Capitol in Jefferson
City, Missouri. In his later years, Miller painted marine
subjects.
Miller
held memberships in the American Art Association of
Paris; the International Society of Painters, Sculptors,
and Gravers; the National Academy of Design, the North
Shore Arts Association; the Paris Society of American
Painters, and the St. Louis Artists' Guild, among many
others.
Richard
Miller died in St. Augustine, Florida, in 1963. His
paintings can be found in major public collections throughout
the United States and abroad, including the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York; the Art Institute of Chicago;
the St. Louis Art Museum; the Corcoran Gallery of Art,
Washington, D.C.; the Musée d'Orsay, Paris; the
Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp; the Museo de Arte
Moderna, Venice; the Royal Museum, Oslo; and the collection
of the King of Italy.