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Karl Bodmer's Illustrations to Prince
Maximillian of Wied-Neuwied's Travels in the Interior of North America 1832-34 Published in Association with the Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska |
Bodmer's AmericaCatalogue of Prints |
| Funeral Scaffold of a Sioux Chief (near Fort Pierre) |
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Engraved by Hurlimann Printed by Bougeard | |
| Tableau 11. Funeral Scaffold of a Sioux Chief (near Fort Pierre) | |
| $2,200.00 |
A pencil drawing by Bodmer in the Joslyn collection dated April 28, 1834 describes a Sioux camp
which the artist visited during a brief stop at Fort Pierre, South Dakota, on his return downriver
from Fort Clark. The title of the subsequent print based on this sketch calls attention to the
scaffold burial, at right. According to Prince Maximilian, this was said to hold the remains of a
celebrated warrior.
Placing the dead upon raised platforms or in the branches of trees was a common practice
among Plains tribes in the nineteenth century. The body of the deceased, wrapped tightly in a
robe or blanket with small personal possessions, thus was elevated from accidental contact and
protected from the ravaging of wild animals. Skeletal remains from burials of this type sometimes
were consigned later to the earth.
Having seen a great many of these funeral scaffolds during his travels on the upper Missouri,
Maximilian considered this one to be unusual in featuring the basket-like framework over the
corpse, probably placed there as additional protection from the scavenging of carrion birds.
Although similar in composition and general details to the later aquatint, Bodmer's initial sketch
does not include the groups of figures to be seen in the foreground of the print.
Tableau 30 shows an Assiniboin burial of a similar kind, placed in a tree. Other Sioux subjects
are reproduced in Vignette XXX and Tableaux 8, 9.
Text by David Hunt, Director, Stark Museum, Orange, Texas, USA
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