Peter Miller | |
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Born | Doctors Hospital in Manhattan | January 6, 1934
Nationality | American |
Citizenship | United States of America |
Education | B.A. in literature |
Alma mater | University of Toronto |
Occupation |
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Known for | Photographs of rural Americans |
Peter Miller (born January 6, 1934) is an American photographer, author, publisher and journalist.
Miller is best known for his photographs of rural Americans. During his long career Miller has taken photographs of Paris in the 1950s, the grape harvest in Margaux (France), Dachau, Rajasthan, the Atacama Desert, ski racing, and the World Trade Towers. In 1997 he published a selection of his Paris photographs, The First Time I Saw Paris. His teacher Yousuf Karsh said of the book: "With poetic eloquence borne of mature reflection, Peter Miller nostalgically re-examines his youthful photographic love affair with post-World War II Paris, and we share the thrill of discovery as his perceptive lens captures the timeless spirit of a generation."
Miller was born on January 6, 1934, at Doctors Hospital (Manhattan). He spent his early life in New Jersey and Connecticut. After his parents divorced, his mother decided to move with him and his brother and sister to Weston, Vermont,where he soon found his love for hunting, fishing, and skiing. When he was in high school, several rifles were stolen from his home in Weston and with the $160 in insurance money his mother gave him he bought a twin-lens reflex camera.[1][2]
Miller spent much of his time afterward walking the fields around Weston where he met the local farmers. “I liked the farmers,” he said. “They were the first people I met.”[3] He was completely self-taught as a photographer as there was no one around who was interested in photography except one man in Manchester Village who had a studio where Miller often had his prints developed.
Miller received his B.A. in literature from the University of Toronto. While in Toronto, he became an apprentice for the photographer Yousuf Karsh. In 1954 Miller spent three months with Karsh in Europe photographing the leading intellectuals of the day, including Picasso, Albert Camus, Pablo Casals, and the future Pope John XXIII.[4]
After graduating in 1955, Miller enlisted in the U.S. Army and became a Signal Corps photographer. He was assigned to Paris where he photographed French and American generals, public relations stories, and crime scenes. When he completed his tour of duty in 1958, Miller worked in New York City as a reporter for Life (magazine). As a reporter, he was not allowed to take photos while on assignment. However, the job gave him an opportunity to learn how to write and how a magazine was put together.[5]
An avid skier, in 1964 Miller returned to Vermont to start his own ski magazine Vermont Skiing, which folded during the recession of 1968. From 1969-1990, he was a contributing editor and photographer for Ski magazine, based in New York City. In 1981 he also worked as a freelance photographer and writer and became a stock photographer for the Image Bank, Iconica, and photo stock agencies in Europe and Asia.
In 1990 Miller returned to Vermont and established Silver Print Press to publish his photographs of rural Vermonters, mortgaging his house to do so as he could not find a publisher.[3] Vermont People, People of the Great Plains, Vermont Farm Women, Vermont Gathering Places, A Lifetime of Vermont People, and Vanishing Vermonters were all published by Silver Print Press.
Miller also ghosted and provided photographs for Larry Benoit’s book How to Bag the Biggest Buck of Your Life, about tracking. Nothing Hardly Ever Happens in Colbyville, Vermont is an anthology of 27 stories written or edited by Miller about his hometown of Colbyville and nearby Stowe, which includes a sad account of fishing and Vietnam, but also a hilarious story of a flea attack.
Following publication of Vermont Farm Women, Miller set up the Vermont Farm Women’s Fund and donated part of the proceeds from the sale of his book to the fund.[6] In 2006 he was the first author and photographer to be named Vermonter of the Year by the Burlington Free Press and the Vermont state legislature. Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy gave a speech on the Senate floor about Peter Miller’s work documenting over a half a century of rural Vermont.[7] His photographs have been exhibited in one-man shows in New York, Oklahoma, Paris, and Tokyo, and are on display in his gallery in Colbyville, Vermont, and on his virtual gallery titled Off the Wall on his website.
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