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Awascho-Dickfas (“Swallow with the White Belly”). A Perfect Recreation™ of the original watercolor and pencil on paper. By Karl Bodmer, 1834. 10” x 12½”
VIDEO: Brooks Joyner discusses the Perfect Recreations. We regard Karl Bodmer’s 1832 – 1834 original watercolors of the American Indian to be the most important, beautiful and compelling images of the Plains Indians. We are proud to offer the exclusive, first-ever archival reproductions of his original watercolors. At the beginning of his American journey, Karl Bodmer was a 23-year old Swiss artist who could not have imagined the new world he found himself exploring. With a heightened sense of awareness, an extraordinary eye for detail and a great gift for rendering on paper everything he saw – Bodmer gave us powerful portraits of the indigenous American nobility. He painted the Hidatsa man, Awascho-Dickfas (“Swallow with the White Belly”), in March, 1834 at Ft. Clark and later used his figure in the aquatint Tableau 27, Scalp Dance of the Minitarres. The wolf tails adorning the moccasins were part of the ceremonial regalia used by some of the Hidatsa men’s society’s. "Real Bodmers aren't for sale, but stunning re-creations are." The Omaha World-Herald praised our "high-resolution, painstakingly detailed reproductions of eight of Bodmer's most famous watercolors". Read the complete article Framing your Bodmers
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