Millard Owen Sheets (1907 – 1989) was an American artist, teacher, and architectural designer. He was one of the earliest of the California Scene Painting artists and helped define the art movement. Many of his large-scale building-mounted mosaics from the mid-20th century are still extant in Southern California. His paintings are in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum in New York, the Chicago Art Institute, the National Gallery in Washington D.C.; and the Los Angeles County Museum.
Millard Sheets was born and grew up in the Pomona Valley, east of Los Angeles. He attended the Chouinard Art Institute and studied with painters Frank Tolles Chamberlin and Clarence Hinkle. While he was still a teenager, his watercolors were accepted for exhibition in the annual California Water Color Society show. By the age of 19, he was elected into membership of the California Water Color Society. The following year he was hired to teach watercolor painting before his graduation from Chouinard.
In May 1927, Sheets exhibited twelve of his landscapes and seascapes oil paintings at the Ebell Club in Pomona. In 1929 he won second prize in the Texas Wildflowers Competitive Exhibitions, and the generous award allowed Sheets to travel to Europe for a year to further his art education. By the early 1930s he began to achieve national recognition as a prominent American artist. In Los Angeles he was recognized as the leading figure and driving force behind the California Style watercolor movement.
Between 1935 and 1941, his recognition, awards, and output increased, winning him repeated mention in Art Digest and a color reproduction of his work in the book Eyes on America. In 1935 at age 28, he was the subject of a monograph published in Los Angeles. In 1943, he painted four murals at the Main Interior Building in Washington, D.C. in the subject of "The Negro's Contribution in the Social and Cultural Development of America."
His art sales enabled him to travel again to Europe, Central America, and Hawaii, where he painted on location. Although his watercolor techniques during this period ranged from very tight to very loose, a consistent, he nevertheless exhibited a personal style.
During World War II, he was an artist-correspondent for Life and the United States Army Air Forces in India and Burma. Many of his works from this period document the scenes of famine, war, and death that he witnessed. His wartime experience also informed his post-war art for a number of years, where while painting in California and Mexico in the 1940s his work followed dark hues and depressing subjects. After the 1950s his style shifted toward brighter colors and subjects from his worldwide travels.
Outside of California, he took on commissions for the Detroit Public Library, the Mayo Clinic, the dome of the National Shrine, the University of Notre Dame library, the Hilton Hotel in Honolulu, and the Mercantile National Bank in Dallas.
In 1953, Sheets was appointed director of Otis Art Institute. Under his leadership, the school's academic program was restructured to offer BFA and MFA degrees, and a ceramics department was created. During that time, a ceramics building, gallery, library, and studio wing were completed. By the time Sheets left Otis in 1962, the form and direction of the college had changed dramatically.
The Millard Sheets Art Center first began as the Fine Arts Program of the Los Angeles County Fair in 1922. The 20,000+ square-foot art center was built in 1937 by the Works Progress Administration to house the program, the first major gallery dedicated solely to art in Los Angeles County. Each year, the gallery provided visitors to the Los Angeles County Fair with access to art work found throughout the world. In 1994 the building was dedicated to Millard Sheets, and in 2013 was identified by Fairplex as the home for year-round art education and exhibitions and is currently a part of The Learning Centers at Fairplex.
© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Millard Owen Sheets or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

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| Millard Sheets |
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| South Pomona Grainery, c.1926 |
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| Circus Wagons, c.1927 |
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| Tenement Flats, c.1935 |
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| The River Canyon, c.1937 |
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| Exotic Nude Girl, Polynesian Girl, Annabella, c.1947 |
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| Beach Near Kailua-Kona Hawaii (View of Mokuaikawa), c.1950 |
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| Mosaic on the Mercantile Continental Building, downtown Dallas, c.1959 |
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| Early Pomona Family, c.1962 |
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| Summertime, Sunset Golden Sky and Red Lighthouse, Martha's Vineyard, c.1964 |
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| Pomona First Federaln now USBank Claremont, 1969 |
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| Imperial Bank horse sculpture c.1975 Los Angeles |
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| Oregon Landscape, c.1976 |
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| Brood Mare Pasture, c.1977 |
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| Fisherman, c.1977 |
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| Mexican Travelers, c.1977 |
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| Mosaic mural, 1977 West Portal, San Francisco |
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| Old Village, c.1977 |
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| Two Horses, c.1977 |
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| Mural Scenes of the Old West, 1979 Buena Park |
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| Cultural Development of America, Department of the Interior |
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| Detroit Library |
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| Gathering n/d |
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| Mosaic mural, La Mesa, San Diego |
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| Mosaic mural Lombard Van Ness branch, San Francisco |
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| Mosaic mural Lubbock Memorial Civic Center |
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| Mosaic mural in Riverside, Calif. |
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| Mosaic mural |
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| Children's Zoo, mural, San Diego |
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| Rainbow Tower, mural Hilton Hawaiian Village |
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| The Harbor mural San Diego |
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| The Word of Life mural the Hesburgh Library |