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    • CHARLES BODMER (ATTRIBUTED) - PACHTUWA-CHTA, AN ARIKARA WARRIOR
      Aug. 26, 2020

      CHARLES BODMER (ATTRIBUTED) - PACHTUWA-CHTA, AN ARIKARA WARRIOR

      Est: $200 - $400

      Lot 10 Charles Bodmer (attributed) Pachtuwa-Chta, An Arikara Warrior etching with aquatint each with blind stamp plate: 13 x 9 inches sheet: 20 x 14 inches Provenance: From a New York Collection published by Ackermann & Co. 96 London

      Capsule Gallery Auction
    • CHARLES BODMER (ATTRIBUTED) - MAHSETTE-KUIUAB, CHEIF, OF THE CREE INDIANS
      Aug. 26, 2020

      CHARLES BODMER (ATTRIBUTED) - MAHSETTE-KUIUAB, CHEIF, OF THE CREE INDIANS

      Est: $200 - $400

      Lot 9 Charles Bodmer (attributed) Mahsette-Kuiuab, Cheif, of the Cree Indians hand colored lithograph each with blind stamp plate:14 x 9 7/8 inches sheet: 20 x 14 3/4 inches Provenance: From a New York Collection published by Ackermann & Co. 96 London

      Capsule Gallery Auction
    • CHARLES BODMER (ATTRIBUTED) - MANDEH-PAHCHU, A YOUNG MANDAN INDIAN
      Aug. 26, 2020

      CHARLES BODMER (ATTRIBUTED) - MANDEH-PAHCHU, A YOUNG MANDAN INDIAN

      Est: $200 - $400

      Lot 5 Charles Bodmer (attributed) Mandeh-Pahchu, A Young Mandan Indian etching with aquatint each with blind stamp plate: 13 1/2 x 10 1/4 inches sheet: 17 x 14 1/2 inches Provenance: From a New York Collection published by Ackermann & Co. 96 London

      Capsule Gallery Auction
    • Photographs: Charles Bodmer (1809-1893)
      Nov. 21, 2010

      Photographs: Charles Bodmer (1809-1893)

      Est: €300 - €400

      Photographs: Charles Bodmer (1809-1893) Travaux dans les champs. Récolte du blé. c. 1870. Cinq épreuves sur papier albuminé, signées pour la plupart dans le négatif. Format moyen : 20 x 26 cm. Accidents.

      Ader
    • CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER
      Oct. 16, 2010

      CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER

      Est: $75 - $150

      CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER STONE WALLS': View of the Storm Walls in upper Missouri. Beautifully framed by J. L. Hudson Co.

      DuMouchelles
    • CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER
      Aug. 15, 2010

      CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER

      Est: $100 - $200

      CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER STONE WALLS': View of the Storm Walls in upper Missouri.

      DuMouchelles
    • [ Books ]
      Jun. 24, 2010

      [ Books ]

      Est: $1,500 - $2,000

      Bodmer, Carl. Herds of Bisons and Elks on the Upper Missouri (from Travels in the Interior of North America. Tab. 47). Engraved by Charles Vogel. Hand-colored aquatint, image size approximately 26.2x32.3 cm. (101/4x123/4") plus margins on 44.9x54.3 cm. (173/4x211/2") sheet. Bodmer blindstamp in lower margin. London: Ackermann & Co., c. 1839 View of a large bison herd entering the Missouri River, a small gathering of Elk on the opposite bank. Print laid-down on later paper backing, some small chips and wear at edges, affixed at edges of margins to upper mat with double-sided tape, some browning in margins, a few small scratches to surface of print; very good.

      PBA Galleries Auctions & Appraisers
    • CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER
      Jun. 12, 2010

      CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER

      Est: $200 - $400

      CHARLES BODMER, PRINT, 11 1/2" X 17", 'ANSICHT DER STONE WALLS': View of the Storm Walls in upper Missouri.

      DuMouchelles
    • BODMER, Karl (after). [New Harmony on the Wabash]
      Dec. 11, 2009

      BODMER, Karl (after). [New Harmony on the Wabash]

      Est: $1,000 - $2,000

      Bodmer’s Proof Aquatint of New Harmony, Indiana, in 1832 61.     BODMER, Karl (after). [New Harmony on the Wabash]. Unlettered, unsigned, aquatint view, probably a proof, on heavy paper. [Coblentz, ca. 1839]. Image size: 29.9 x 43.6 cm; overall sheet size: 33.5 x 46.5 cm. Except for a small area of slight marginal wrinkling at lower left, a minor split in lower margin, and light marginal darkening, very fine.      First edition, apparently unpublished. This view is taken from a prominence and looking to the northwest, showing New Harmony and the Wabash River in the middle ground, the countryside fading into the forested distance, and foreground occupied by a lightly wooded area through which are visible the river and the town in the middle distance. Although the present view is based on Bodmer’s New Harmony visit, it is not the same as the one published in Maximilian’s voyages. In the present instance, the working of the foreground is considerably different, especially in the absence here of the thick copse of trees at the left blocking any further perspective; in the published view, the trees dominate the left side. Here are visible three pigs in the lower left foreground, as opposed to two in the published version. Finally, to the right in the foreground a male figure occupies himself examining something on the ground, a figure absent from the published version. In both views several prominent buildings, some no longer extant, are plainly visible, although more are shown here than in the published view. Rapp’s original granary, for example, is plainly visible, identifiable by its prominent roofline, as is one of the churches. The pigs were possibly drawn by Charles Émile Jacque (Brandon K. Ruud, et al., Karl Bodmer’s North American Prints, Omaha, 2004, pp. 91-92). Overall, this image is more sophisticated and considerably lighter than the published version, and one questions why the other was given preference. Ruud suggests that the New Harmony view was “one of the last plates engraved” (p. 92). This view duplicates neither the published scene nor Bodmer’s original painting of the town.      Bodmer accompanied Prince Alexander Philipp Maximilian zu Wied-Neuwied as an artist on his trip to the American West, 1832-1834. On October 19, 1832, the party arrived at New Harmony, intending to spend only a few days. Maximilian, however, was ill, resulting in an over-winter stay of about four months, although Bodmer himself did not remain in the area the entire period. It was during this time that Bodmer recorded the famous New Harmony and Indiana views first published in Maximilian’s 1839 Reise in das Innere Nord-America and reprinted several times after that in various translations and other reproductions. At the time of this view, New Harmony was a flourishing cultural and intellectual community, where Maximilian and Bodmer could consult the likes of Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Thomas Say, the latter of whom had arrived in early 1826 on the so-called Boatload of Knowledge. Unfortunately, also by that time Robert Dale Owen had admitted his utopian colony was a failure and departed, although his son still lived there.      This iconic view visually incorporates all that is new and wonderful about the western landscapes that Maximilian and Bodmer explored and documented. Admitted to the U.S. in 1816, Indiana was still basically a frontier area, although not so remote as some of the places the party would visit farther west. In this case, the setting is unusual and almost unique, since the community depicted is utopian in character and represents the pure human spirit in a landscape unspoiled by development or social vice. Ironically, Bodmer clearly realized the tension between such new settlements and the land upon which they resided. Although an important intellectual and social community far removed from larger centers of such activity, the town is depicted by Bodmer as almost an afterthought, banished to a relatively insignificant depiction in the middle right of the total scene, which is dominated by lush vegetation, even pigs, and apparently endless forests stretching into the distance beyond it, a land full of promise but as yet unconquered by the tiny settlement shown. Despite the relative insignificance New Harmony itself is given in the overall view, Bodmer seems as well to be stating that he doubts the place is on the verge of crumbling. The town is compact, in a beautiful setting, and has obviously substantial structures in place. Such ultimately successful scenes would be repeated all over America as the nation expanded.      Swiss-born artist Bodmer (1809-1893), after studying art as a youth, agreed to accompany Maximilian on his American tour as an artist. He is best known for the views that resulted from this trip. Maximilian (1782-1867), a prominent German naturalist and explorer, at one time studied under Alexander von Humboldt.

      Dorothy Sloan Books
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