MILLER
COLLECTING JAPANESE PRINTS FEATURED WESTERN ARTIST
Lillian Miller
1895 - 1943
Lillian Miller was a woodblock print artist, painter, and photographer born in Tokyo on July 20, 1895. The daughter of an American diplomat, Miller, entered into the ateliers of Kano Tomonobu and Shimada Bokusen, studying conservative styles of brush painting until 1909. Shortly after that, Miller's father was recalled to Washington and Miller enrolled at Vassar College in New York.
After graduating in 1917, she took an extended vacation to Korea before returning to Japan two years later. Miller resumed her studies under Bokusen, and in 1920 her work, In a Korean Palace Garden, was entered into Imperial Salon, whereby it was awarded the Tokusenjo, or special merit. From 1920 onward, Miller transitioned to screen paintings, loose prints, and woodblock-printed cards, working with carver Matsumoto and printer Nishimura Kumakichi II. Such works featured commercially viable images of Korean and Japanese figures and landscapes, marketed to Western diplomats and wealthy businessmen. After meeting Grace Nicholson, a purveyor of antique goods, Miller was able to establish a more robust network of patrons throughout the United States. In 1929 she returned to America and spent the year exhibiting in various museums throughout the country, resulting in great commercial success.
Miller then returned to Japan, staging several exhibitions until 1935 when she was stricken with ovarian cancer. Political instability the following year forced her to relocate to Hawaii, where she devoted herself to watercolors and sumi-e. After two years, Miller once again relocated, this time to San Francisco, where access to larger markets enabled her to continue selling prints. But in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor, Miller chose to put away her brushes and devote herself to the war effort, working as a Research Analyst for the U.S. Navy. In 1942, after the discovery of a malignant tumor in her abdomen, Miller was hospitalized and passed away the following year. The life and legacy of Lillian Miller are unique in many respects. Miller was the only Western artist of the early twentieth century born in Asia with a mastery of the Japanese language and cultural apparatus. Financially independent, self-carving, and self-publicized, she operated without domineering hanmoto publishers. Miller further transgressed the traditional sexual, economic, and social roles of women, remaining single and unmarried throughout her life.
Despite the heterodoxy of her activities, Miller's work was far from transgressive. Her lyrically naturalistic prints and watercolors of Japanese and Korean figures and landscapes parallel the romanticized views of Asia at the heart of Western discourse. In contrast to her Western contemporaries, Miller's prints were devoted to the quaint, traditional, and feminine aspects of East Asia. She was able to adapt such knowledge of Japanese painting to Western palettes, evolving a style of her own, which was both fresh and individualistic. Furthermore, her success as an artist is, in many ways, attributed to bridging the gaps between both cultural and national identities.