ABOVE: Workers prepare Arthur Miller’s artwork for shipment to a U.S. Embassy in Africa. RIGHT: Miller shows one of his works selected for display in the official residence of Sandra E. Clark, the U.S. ambassador to Burkina Fasou in West Africa.

From the Wyoming Valley to Africa, with Pride

One afternoon, a U.S. State Department truck pulled into the Breaker Brewing Company parking lot on Northampton Street in Wilkes-Barre Twp.

Full Article

Government workers went into the brewery, expertly dismounted a 24-by-36-inch matted, glazed and framed piece of digital photographic art from the brewery wall and lovingly crated it for the first leg of its trip to Burkina Fasou, West Africa, where it will be hung in the official residence of United States Ambassador Sandra E. Clark.

It was a proud moment for the creator, 75-year-old artist Arthur Miller. Commercial photography was a livelihood for Miller for decades, but not a passion.

“I really did commercial work to support my interest in art,” he said in an interview one afternoon at Breaker Brewing Company, where his photographic art is on permanent display.

The artwork Clark selected is described as “a semi-impressionistic view of Frances Slocum State Park, Luzerne County, PA, titled ‘Ducks In A Row.’” Miller said when the curator of the U.S. Department of State, Art in Embassies program emailed him to say his artwork had been selected for embassy display, “I thought it had to be somebody pulling a prank, then the State Department guys came and packaged it up.”

Miller grew up in Parsons, the son of Thomas, a miner at Pagnotti’s Pine Ridge Breaker, and Beatrice Miller. His father, 46 when Arthur was born, died of a cerebral hemorrhage when Arthur was 12.

Widowed with four kids and limited income, Beatrice had to move the family to an apartment on North Main Street.

Though Miller had an uncle, Charlie, who was into photography, his biggest early influence was Andy Palencar, the artwork and painting teacher at Coughlin. Palencar later became the first head of the Art Department at Luzerne County Community College.

After he graduated from Coughlin, Miller joined the Navy.

“I couldn’t swing college,” he said. “I told the Navy recruiter I’d join if he could get me into photography school and it worked.”Read More

AuthorThe Citizens' Voice - Jack Smiles
Websitehttps://www.citizensvoice.com/lifestyles/from-the-wyoming-valley-to-africa-with-pride/article_d7a2ff26-8b41-5b23-8d49-ce125eda3d51.html
Tags, ,