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Setting Traps for Beaver
Setting Traps for Beaver
Setting Traps for Beaver

Setting Traps for Beaver

Artist (American, 1810 - 1874)
Dateafter 1837
Mediumoil on academy board mounted to wood panel
Dimensions7 x 10 inches (17.8 x 25.4 cm)
Other: 7 3/8 x 10 1/2 inches (18.7 x 26.7 cm)
Frame: 9 7/8 × 13 1/8 × 1 1/8 inches (25.1 × 33.3 × 2.9 cm)
Credit LineBequest of H.J. Lutcher Stark, 1965
Object number31.34.12
ClassificationsPaintings
Label TextCaptain William Drummond Stewart, a Scottish aristocrat, hired artist Alfred Jacob Miller to portray his trip to the Rocky Mountains. For Stewart, America represented a great adventure. They journeyed with a caravan bringing supplies to the men who trapped beaver for the fur trade. Miller documented the life of the mountain men, with a sometimes romanticized view.
Provenance(Edward Eberstadt & Sons, New York, New York)[1]; purchased February 10, 1958 by H.J. Lutcher Stark [1887-1965]; bequeathed September 2, 1965 to the Nelda C. and H.J. Lutcher Stark Foundation; accessioned to the Stark Museum of Art | 1. “We have been some ten or a dozen years amassing the rest of this collection from various individuals who were direct descendents[sic] of the pioneer artist himself.” (excerpt from a letter to HJLS from Charles Eberstadt dated November 26, 1957)
On View
Not on view
Departure of the War Canoe
Alfred Jacob Miller
after 1837
Lord Stewart Shooting the Elk
Alfred Jacob Miller
c. 1859
Hunters Approaching Buffalo
Alfred Jacob Miller
after 1837
Green River
Alfred Jacob Miller
1837
Trappers at the Evening Meal
Alfred Jacob Miller
1837
Green Aspen
Ernest Leonard Blumenschein
1935
Autumn, Montclair
George Inness
late 1880s
Lost on the Prairie
Alfred Jacob Miller
c. 1855
Indian Guide Trying the Ford
Alfred Jacob Miller
c. 1840
Indians at the Mountain Lake
Alfred Jacob Miller
after 1853
Hunting the Elk
Alfred Jacob Miller
after 1837
Lassoing Wild Horses
Alfred Jacob Miller
after 1837