The Old Print Shop

Woman of the Snake-Tribe : Woman of the Cree-Tribe. Tab. 33.

  • ARTIST: Karl Bodmer

  • PUBLISHER: London published by Ackermann & Co. 96 Strand..

  • MEDIUM: Aquatint, mezzotint, etching and roulette engraving.

    DATE: 1839-1844.

  • EDITION SIZE: Vignette. Plate size 14 1/4 x 18 3/8" (36.5 x 46..5 cm).

  • DESCRIPTION: Peint d’apres nat. par Ch. Bodmer. Engraved by P. Legrand. Printed by Bougeard, Paris. Published for "Travels in the Interior of North America during the years 1832-34 by Maximilian, Prince of Wied-Neuwied.” <BR><BR> In 1832 the German prince Maximilian of Wied, organized an expedition to explore the region along the Missouri River. He was accompanied by Karl Bodmer, a young Swiss artist, who recorded in pictorial form much of what he observed. Following the Lewis & Clark trail up the Missouri River, they traveled 5,000 miles during the course of a year. Maximilian kept detailed notes on a day-by-day basis for his book, which was published six years later in German, French, and English editions and included Bodmer's aquatint engravings. Karl Bodmer's landscapes, portraits, and splendid scenes of Indian life are regarded today as first rate picture histories of the western frontier at that time. These two woman were painted at Fort Union on October 8, 1833.

  • ADDITIONAL INFO:

  • CONDITION: Good condition with modern hand coloring.

  • REFERENCE: "Bodmer's North American Prints" edited by Brandon Rudd, Tab #33, pg 189.