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265:, and countless others. Contemporary accounts comment on the realistic accuracy reflected in the portraits, and also in his portrayals of scenes from Indian life. His paintings of Indian life as he saw the villages and his Indian portraits are considered especially important for their authentic detail. He produced numerous paintings that tell a story, including his largest documented canvas, now in the collection of the Cincinnati Public Schools, which depicts the "Advance of Civilization".
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On July 8, 1896, Hauser married Minnie Boltz. They had no children. Minnie often traveled with him, and in 1901 John and Minnie were adopted by the Sioux nation, who named them in their language with the names meaning "Straight White Shield" and "Bring Us Sweets", respectively. John and Minnie Hauser
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spent considerable time on the Pine Ridge reservation, where they camped in a tent on the Sioux lands for six months a year between 1901 and 1905. When the couple built a home in the
Clifton area of Cincinnati in 1904, they named it "Pine Ridge" to reflect their love of and respect for the Sioux.
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In 1885, in the company of another
Cincinnati artist, Joseph Henry Sharp, he sailed to Germany, did some traveling, and enrolled in the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich in October. After completing the program, Hauser continued his studies in Paris and DĂĽsseldorf. He returned to Munich for
228:. In 1891 he made his first trip to Arizona and New Mexico, which inspired his interest in portraying Native Americans in his paintings. In 1893 he traveled with John Henry Sharp to New Mexico and other areas of the Southwest. He had a lifelong enchantment with the American Indian and the
187:. Hauser first studied in Europe in 1880, when he traveled to Munich, where he studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts. That year he completed his first documented painting, a portrait of the famed Indian scout and tracker "Lord Baltimore" (cf.
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In 1883 he became a member of the
Drawing Department of the Cincinnati Public Schools, a position he held until he withdrew in 1885 to sail for Europe.
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Upon his return to
Cincinnati, Hauser began to establish his reputation as an artist. In 1890 he became one of the early members of the
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and depictions of various aspects of their lives. He had academic training at art schools in Europe, including the
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The John Hauser
Project has been established as a non-commercial effort to produce a
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Teepee Smoke: A New Look into the Life and Work of Joseph Henry Sharp,
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Teepee Smoke: A New Look into the Life and Work of Joseph Henry Sharp,
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Hauser painted hundreds of portraits of Native
Americans, including
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382:, Cleveland: Memorial, 1914. " John Hauser." pp. 333–36.
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Vol. 16. New York: White, 1918. "Hauser, John." pp.
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in South Dakota that he and his wife were adopted by the
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Artists of the
American West: A Biographical Dictionary
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Representative
Citizens of Ohio: Memorial—Biographical
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279:of his works and a full biography of John Hauser.
369:The National Cyclopedia of American Biography.
365:Santa Fe: One Horse Land And Cattle Co., 2007
310:Santa Fe: One Horse Land And Cattle Co., 2007
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327:. Chicago: The Sage Press Inc. p. 109.
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411:Academy of Fine Arts, Munich alumni
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189:Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
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431:American people of German descent
323:Dawdy, Doris Ostrander (1974).
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396:19th-century American painters
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99:http://johnhauserproject.com/
153:as members of their nation.
212:Return to the United States
179:In 1873 he enrolled in the
113:painter best known for his
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123:Royal Academy of Fine Arts
183:, where he studied under
181:McMicken School of Design
174:Ohio Mechanics' Institute
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416:Painters from Cincinnati
185:Thomas Satterwhite Noble
157:Early life and education
220:In the Foot Hills, 1896
401:American male painters
378:Wright, G. Frederick;
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147:Pine Ridge Reservation
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168:, Hauser was born in
348:John Hauser Project
236:Marriage and family
226:Cincinnati Art Club
90:Minnie Boltz Hauser
276:catalogue raisonné
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208:additional study.
139:Joseph Henry Sharp
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170:Cincinnati, Ohio
143:Taos, New Mexico
119:Native Americans
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52:Cincinnati, Ohio
48:January 30, 1859
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151:Lakota Sioux
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65:(1913-10-06)
426:1913 deaths
421:1859 births
161:The son of
107:John Hauser
23:John Hauser
390:Categories
356:References
334:0804006075
166:immigrants
44:1859-01-30
263:Red Cloud
259:Bald Face
131:Southwest
115:portraits
283:See also
195:Teaching
111:American
82:Painting
95:Website
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269:Legacy
245:Career
203:Europe
163:German
127:Munich
87:Spouse
373:79–80
295:Notes
329:ISBN
230:West
135:West
133:and
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60:Died
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38:Born
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