Bertha Müller

After her father's death, Leopold took care of his younger siblings, until the family's financial situation improved, around 1870.

For ten years, from 1880, she and Marie worked in their brother Leopold's studio at the Academy of Fine Arts; taking additional lessons from him.

[2] She also worked in Stuttgart, and was a member of the Württembergischer Malerinnenverein [de] (Women artists' association), from 1903 to 1907.

[3] She never became as well known as her sister, and exhibited little, although she participated in a showing in the rotunda of The Woman's Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

[4] In addition to her original portraits, she made several copies on behalf of Kaiser Wilhelm II, including one of his grandmother, Queen Victoria (original by Heinrich von Angeli), which is now in the National Portrait Gallery, London.

Bertha Müller; by her brother Leopold Carl Müller (1870s)
Portrait of an Oriental Woman
Emilie Louise Flöge Playing the Mandolin