Káma-Kapúska! Making Marks in Indian Country, 1833–34

Cross Reference: Fort Clark as a Gallery

From:  Fort Clark as a Gallery

“It is important to unpack Mató-Tópe’s act of recognizing portrait sitters, long before the paintings left Indian country, because such recognition did not necessarily occur through Bodmer’s skilled hand at Western-style mimesis. The portrait of Kiäsax, for instance, featured a familiar resident of the Awatíkihu (fig. 13). A Pikuni (Piegan) warrior, he had married a Minitari woman, and the couple lived in the Third, Fourth, or Fifth Village. Bodmer had painted Kiäsax aboard their steamer while headed northward to Fort Union in June 1833 (the summer before the Europeans were stranded at Fort Clark on their return south), and Kiäsax seems to have responded to the session by gathering plants for Wied-Neuwied’s botanical collections.‍[46]Go to page

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