Lot Essay
“A faithful and vivid picture” (from the preface, translated). The first copy of the fully hand-colored issue of Bodmer’s masterpiece to be offered at auction in about 30 years.
Extremely rare, fully hand-colored first edition of the most important illustrated book on the American West; the plates all in early states, and text on large-paper. An original German front wrapper is preserved. This work recounts the travels of the German Prince Maximilian of Wied on the upper Missouri River in 1832-34, accompanied by the Swiss artist Karl Bodmer. As distinct from previous explorers, Prince Maximilian went without a political or financial agenda, but simply to see what he could see. He and his entourage went "as far upstream as the American Fur Company post of Fort Mackenzie in present-day Montana, and spending the winter at Fort Clark, near the Mandan Indian villages. During this prolonged stay, he and Bodmer had ample opportunity to observe the Indian tribes of the Upper Missouri...
Bodmer's atlas, made up of smaller vignettes and larger tableaus of scenes from the trip, is justly famous for its extraordinary depictions of the Indians of the Upper Missouri. These are, in fact, the best images of American Indians executed before the era of photography ... No other images of American Indians even come close to these in accuracy, detail, and execution, faithfully transferred from the original [watercolors] to the aquatint plates under Bodmer's close supervision of the printing of the atlas" (Best of the West).
This work was offered by its publishers in uncolored, partially colored, or fully colored editions with the text printed on large Imperial paper, as here. The fully colored edition was of course the most expensive and the most desirable, as it is today, almost 200 years later. Of this German, fully colored edition, there were just 46 subscribers listed in volume 2. Brandon Ruud suggests that the total number assembled was likely between 100 and 200. The last copy of the fully-colored issue that we trace at auction was the Richard Manney copy, sold in 1991.
The plates themselves underwent considerable revision during printing and are known in from two to five or more states. Typically the first state would have the simplest caption; images were occasional re-worked and captions were updated to include the English translation, the numbering changed from roman to Arabic, printers’ were credited or uncredited, etc. The last state was almost always the only one to be dated within the plate. Of the 81 plates in the present set, 74 are in the first state, five are in the second state and three are in the third state—and none of the plates are dated. The first of the vignettes, depicting the Boston Lighthouse, is the only image first printed with a caption only in English, as here. It is one of just 100 printed in this first state. The vignette plates, too, are all on the smaller size paper as original intended by the publishers, confirming an early issue.
The preserved wrapper in the tableaux atlas is a rarity in itself; there are only two known complete sets of wrappers—at the Beinecke and at the Joslyn Art Museum. The large type on dark blue paper, “promises a fantastic voyage to the viewer” (Ruud). This wrapper once contained eight plates, and it is specified that they were for “Augabe No. V,” i.e. with all 81 plates hand-colored and the text on Imperial paper. Best of the West 73; Field 1036; Howes M443a (“dd”= superlatively rare); Sabin 47014; Wagner-Camp 76:1. See Ruud, ed., Karl Bodmer’s North American Prints, 2004.
Extremely rare, fully hand-colored first edition of the most important illustrated book on the American West; the plates all in early states, and text on large-paper. An original German front wrapper is preserved. This work recounts the travels of the German Prince Maximilian of Wied on the upper Missouri River in 1832-34, accompanied by the Swiss artist Karl Bodmer. As distinct from previous explorers, Prince Maximilian went without a political or financial agenda, but simply to see what he could see. He and his entourage went "as far upstream as the American Fur Company post of Fort Mackenzie in present-day Montana, and spending the winter at Fort Clark, near the Mandan Indian villages. During this prolonged stay, he and Bodmer had ample opportunity to observe the Indian tribes of the Upper Missouri...
Bodmer's atlas, made up of smaller vignettes and larger tableaus of scenes from the trip, is justly famous for its extraordinary depictions of the Indians of the Upper Missouri. These are, in fact, the best images of American Indians executed before the era of photography ... No other images of American Indians even come close to these in accuracy, detail, and execution, faithfully transferred from the original [watercolors] to the aquatint plates under Bodmer's close supervision of the printing of the atlas" (Best of the West).
This work was offered by its publishers in uncolored, partially colored, or fully colored editions with the text printed on large Imperial paper, as here. The fully colored edition was of course the most expensive and the most desirable, as it is today, almost 200 years later. Of this German, fully colored edition, there were just 46 subscribers listed in volume 2. Brandon Ruud suggests that the total number assembled was likely between 100 and 200. The last copy of the fully-colored issue that we trace at auction was the Richard Manney copy, sold in 1991.
The plates themselves underwent considerable revision during printing and are known in from two to five or more states. Typically the first state would have the simplest caption; images were occasional re-worked and captions were updated to include the English translation, the numbering changed from roman to Arabic, printers’ were credited or uncredited, etc. The last state was almost always the only one to be dated within the plate. Of the 81 plates in the present set, 74 are in the first state, five are in the second state and three are in the third state—and none of the plates are dated. The first of the vignettes, depicting the Boston Lighthouse, is the only image first printed with a caption only in English, as here. It is one of just 100 printed in this first state. The vignette plates, too, are all on the smaller size paper as original intended by the publishers, confirming an early issue.
The preserved wrapper in the tableaux atlas is a rarity in itself; there are only two known complete sets of wrappers—at the Beinecke and at the Joslyn Art Museum. The large type on dark blue paper, “promises a fantastic voyage to the viewer” (Ruud). This wrapper once contained eight plates, and it is specified that they were for “Augabe No. V,” i.e. with all 81 plates hand-colored and the text on Imperial paper. Best of the West 73; Field 1036; Howes M443a (“dd”= superlatively rare); Sabin 47014; Wagner-Camp 76:1. See Ruud, ed., Karl Bodmer’s North American Prints, 2004.