Alfred Jacob Miller
Indians Hunting Elk on the Platte
1864
Physical Qualities
Oil on canvas, 28 x 34 3/4 in. (71.1 x 88.3 cm)
Framed: 39 x 46 1/4 x 4 1/2 in. (99.1 x 117.5 x 11.4 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Alfred J. Miller
Object Number
1946.3
In this painting, two Indigenous men ride horseback and pursue an elk during a hunt. Alfred Jacob Miller painted this scene from an observational sketch after attending an 1837 gathering of multiple tribes living in the Great Plains region near Horse Creek in
present-day Wyoming.
Miller’s journal entries from this experience speak to the riders’ extensive knowledge of the terrain and behavior of the elk. Riding at full gallop, the hunters drove the animal into the treacherous Platte River, which had grown up to three quarters of a mile wide due to
recent rains. Miller learned from these Indigenous hunters, “Even in the water [the elk] is a dangerous customer, for he has a trick of using his long horns to great advantage, and keeping his enemies at bay.”
Given by the family of the artist's family, Baltimore
PM, Baltimore, "The Paintings of Alfred Jacob Miller, Artist of Baltimore and West," Jan. 8-Feb. 12, 1950, n.p.
PM, Baltimore ["Alfred Jacob Miller"], Jan. 12-Feb. 16, 1969.
BMA, "Indians and the West, Works by Karl Bodmer and Alfred Jacob Miller," Feb. 29-Apr. 30, 1972.
PM, Baltimore ["Alfred Jacob Miller"], Jan. 12-Feb. 16, 1969.
BMA, "Indians and the West, Works by Karl Bodmer and Alfred Jacob Miller," Feb. 29-Apr. 30, 1972.
Sona K. Johnston, "American Painting 1750-1900 from the Collection of The Baltimore Museum of Art," 1983, pp. 105-107, ill. p. 106.
Benskin, Elizabeth, and Suzy Wolffe. Teacher's Guide to the American Collection. Baltimore, MD: Baltimore Museum of Art, 2014, pages 43 and 50.
Inscribed: l.r. of center, "Miller, 1865"