Archibald Herman Müller

Indian painter (1878–1960)

Archibald Herman Müller
Born(1878-04-11)11 April 1878
Kochi, Kerala
Died24 September 1960(1960-09-24) (aged 82)
Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Alma materMadras School of Art, Madras
Known forPainting
StyleRealism

Archibald Herman Müller (11 March 1878 – 24 September 1960) was an artist of realistic paintings and one of India's early 20th Century great talents.

Müller, the son of a German father and Indian mother [1], was born in Cochin in the Southern Indian state of Kerala, and lived and worked in India. He joined[clarification needed] the Madras School of Art and received early recognition[citation needed]. He won the gold medal at Madras School of Art.[citation needed] After completing his education, he worked with his brother in his photography studio for some time.[clarification needed]

Müller went to Bombay (now Mumbai) in 1911, then considered the modern artistic centre of India. He won the Gold Medal from the Bombay Art Society in the same year. He travelled a lot through Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat and the Himalayas, enjoying the patronage of various Indian royal families. His paintings included landscapes, portraits and scenes from the life of the Maharajas (Kings), historical subjects and incidents from the Hindu epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. His paintings have been acquired by the Buckingham Palace, London, the South Kensington Museum (now known as the Victoria and Albert Museum). Few also exist in the collections of the museums at Sangli, Maharashtra Bikaner, Rajasthan, the Jodhpur Fort and the Royal Palace at Jaipur. His paintings are much sought after and have surfaced in various auctions in recent years.

Untitled painting by Archibald Herman Müller

Müller died in 1960 at the Gandhi Hospital in Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India.

His children [2] moved from India in the 1950s and 1960s. Two daughters, Gwendoline Ellen and Winifred Rose, moved to the UK, and his son, Archibald Hermann Müller (known as Hermann), to Australia in 1967. Several individuals from succeeding generations of his family have proved to be talented artists and writers, some exhibiting nationally and internationally. One of his daughters, Gwendoline (1929-2012), who lived in Prestatyn, North Wales, auctioned many of her paintings for charity. Winifred (Winnie) (1930-2016), also lived in North Wales and continued to paint into her eighties. Son Hermann (1936-2017), inspired by his father's paintings at an early age, expressed his creative talents as an author, and, having studied the bodymind connection, founded the Psychosomatic Therapy College and developed the Psychosomatic Therapy Process which is taught in many countries [3]. Hermann lived on the Gold Coast, Queensland. Highly accomplished contemporary artist Charlotte McGowan-Griffin (1975-)[4], born in London and based in Berlin [5], is a great-granddaughter of A H Müller.

References

  • Book: Artist A. H. Muller and His Art
  • Goa Art Gallery
  • Art and Nationalism in Colonial India, 1850 - 1922 by Partha Mitter, Page 96

External links

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  • Great Indian Art
  • Goa Art Gallery
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