Sarasota Estate Auction
Live Auction

Winter Fine Art & Antiques Auction Day 1

Sat, Jan 23, 2021 11:00AM EST
Lot 297

Lilian May Miller (1895-1943) Amer, Woodcut Print

Estimate: $100 - $200

Bid Increments

Price Bid Increment
$0 $10
$100 $25
$250 $50
$1,000 $100
$2,500 $250
$7,500 $500
$20,000 $1,000
$50,000 $2,500
$100,000 $5,000
$250,000 $10,000
Woodcut print by Lilian Miller, initial monogram in the lower right and signature in the lower left. It is titled "Waterfall" on the gallery label verso from Kabutoya Galleries. "Rainbow Phoenix Waterfall" Diamond Mountains, Korea. A woman who lived between two cultures, she was a native of Japan, but her parents were Americans. She was the daughter of Ransford Miller, an American embassy official in Japan and of Lily Murray, a New York born woman who taught English in Japan. Lily was educated in Japanese methods of painting and exhibited at the Imperial Salon at the Ueno Academy of Fine Arts. She was awarded with the art name of "Gyokka," meaning Jeweled Flower. In 1913, her father was returned to Washington D.C., and she went to Vassar College, earning a Bachelor of Arts Degree. Then her father was named the American Consul General to Seoul, Korea, and she moved there briefly with her family but returned to Washington to take a political job. Then she returned to Japan and studied art with Shimada Bokusen, a progressive artist, and received numerous awards. She turned to woodblock printing, hoping to make a living with this, which she did, particularly making sales among diplomatic corps people. Many of her finished prints as well as paintings were destroyed in the Great Kanto earthquake on September 1, 1923. However, she continued to work and did more landscape prints. Noted for her lack of conventionality, Miller preferred to be called "Jack." She never married, loved mountain climbing and dressed in masculine style clothes. She supported herself solely through the sale of her art. A bitter point in her life was the attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor, and she worked in the war effort against the Japanese. She died at age forty seven of abdominal cancer in California, and her prints were donated to Scripps College. Overall: 21 x 15 1/2 in. Sight: 14 x 9 in. Please note that all sales are final. No refunds will be given under any circumstances.

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