작품 상세

Property of a Nebraska Lady. BODMER, Karl (1809-1893). Massika, Saki Indian / Wakusasse, Musquake Indian, Tab., 3. Aquatint engraving with original hand color. From "Travels in the Interior of North America". J. Holscher, Coblenz; Bertrand, Paris; Ackermann & Co., London: 1832-1843. 16" x 19 1/2" visible, 24 3/4" x 28" framed. Karl Bodmer was a little-known Swiss painter when he was chosen by Prince Maximilian of Prussia to accompany his voyage to America. With the rest of Maximilian's company, the two traveled among the Plains Indians from 1832 to 1834, a time when the Plains and the Rockies were still virtually unknown. They arrived in the West before acculturation had begun to change the lives of the Indians, and Bodmer, who was a protege of the great naturalist von Humboldt, brought a trained ethnologist's eye to the task. The Bodmer/Maximilian collaboration produced a record of their expedition that is incontestably the finest early graphic study of the Plains tribes. These prints rank with the finest Western art in any medium, and they are the most complete record of the Plains Indians before the epidemics of the mid-19th century had decimated their numbers, and before the white man's expansion had taken their lands.