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Karl Bodmer's America / introduction by William H. Goetzmann ; annotations by David C. Hunt and Marsha V. Gallagher ; artist's biography by William J. Orr.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, 1984.Description: viii, 376 p. : ill. : 30.5 cmISBN:
  • 0803211856
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 759.9494 19
LOC classification:
  • ND2010.B58 A4 1984
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Not for Loan Not for Loan Main Library North Dakota Collection 759.94 B668 Not for loan 33111003154784
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Among the many painters of the early American West--of Native Americans, landscape, wildlife--no artist is more admired and renowned than Karl Bodmer. Here, for the first time, carefully prepared and painstakingly reproduced, is the full range of Bodmer's American work, printed in 359 plates, 257 in full color and 102 in black and white. Here, also for the first time, is the background needed to place Bodmer and his work in the history of his time, exploration, and the American frontier: his life, his American journey, and the subjects he painted and their contexts.

Bodmer accompanied his patron, Prince Maximilian of Wied, to the upper Missouri country in 1982-34. For many years, his work was known only through a picture atlas of eighty-one aquatints--largely Native American subjects--published in Europe soon after the party returned home. His original American art dropped out of sight for a hundred years, but was rediscovered at the Wied estate after World War II. The collection is now held by the Inter-North Art Foundation and is on permanent loan to the Joslyn Museum in Omaha, Nebraska. Except for the few selections judged too faint to reproduced, this volume presents that entire collection.

The paintings and sketches constitute a unique visul survey of the American frontier of that day. They follow Maximilian and Bodmer across the United States and some three thousand miles up the Missouri, through the domain of the Sioux, Manans, and Hidatsas, Blackfeet, Assiniboins, and other tribes. They depict landscapes, river views, natural history studies, and views of cities and settlements, as well as Indian portraits and related scenes of aboriginal life.

Karl Bodmer's America is a joint publication of the Joslyn Art Museum and the University of Nebraska Press.

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