[Home] [Catalogue Home] [Category] [Previous Item] [Next Item]

[Logo Image]


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 America

Catalogue of Prints


Interior of the Hut of a Mandan Chief [Item Image]
Engraved by Desmadryl
Printed by Bougeard
Tableau 19. The Interior of the Hut of a Mandan Chief
$3,300.00

The houses of the village-dwelling tribes on the upper Missouri usually were circular in shape, the larger houses averaging about thirty feet in diameter. Their design incorporated four central wooden pillars and an adjoining framework of posts and beams supporting numerous rafters and wall poles. Over these was laid a matting of willow and grass and an outer, insulating layer of earth.

A hole in the roof admitted some light and otherwise vented the smoke from a central firepit in the floor. An exterior, moveable screen shielded the vent from wind and rain. The entrance to the interior was protected from the weather by a covered passageway.

While staying at Fort Clark over the winter of 1833-4, Karl Bodmer visited the dwelling of an old and respected Mandan named Dipauch and later produced a watercolor view of its interior based on sketches he made over a period of several months. This was later published in the European atlas to become one of Bodmer's best known subjects, highly valued for its ethnological detail.

Clearly shown is the construction of the lodge with its central pillars and roof beams. At right, Bodmer included the shields, lances, and medicine symbols of the old warrior occupant. Various utensils and containers for everyday use are to be seen scattered about the floor or hanging from pegs and posts. Dimly outlined against the back wall is the family bed. Sharing the space are the family horses and dogs.

Except for the figures of the horses, which are only pencilled in, the watercolor at Joslyn is reproduced almost exactly in the later print.

A pipe said to have belonged to Dipauch is pictured in Tableau 21 of this series.

Text by David Hunt, Director, Stark Museum, Orange, Texas, USA

Alecto Historical Editions


To contact us:

Alecto Historical Editions - Publications Group
The Seedbed Centre
Vanguard Way
Shoeburyness SS3 9QX
United Kingdom

Phone: +44(0)1702 295929
Fax: +44(0)1702 587845
E-mail


About Alecto | Antiquarian Prints | Banks Florilegium | Mark Catesby's Natural History of North America | Bodmer's America
Audubon Birds | William Daniell - Voyage Round Great Britain | Ferdinand Bauer | William Bartram