Photography by Edward C. Robison III.
Mouth of Fox River (Indiana)
In 1832-34, Swiss-born artist Karl Bodmer accompanied German naturalist Prince Maximilian on a 5,000-mile expedition up the Missouri River. Bodmer rendered this view of the Fox River at dusk using an ochre wash to enhance the scene. A bald eagle rests on twisted roots in the center of the image, while a thicket with old plane trees lines the foreground shore. A flock of now-extinct Carolina parakeets settles down noisily at the roost for the night. Bodmer sensitively integrated signs of human settlement into this seemingly untamed landscape: cattle and horses drink from their watering-place on the opposite bank; and a flatboat with a smoking chimney can be seen in the distance. Maximilian became very ill on the journey in November 1832. While he recovered in the utopian community of New Harmony, Indiana, Bodmer and hunter-taxidermist David Dreidoppel explored the area’s rivers to collect zoological specimens. The Prince spent five months in New Harmony where he consulted with experienced scientists and studied the leading literature on America’s frontier.
Swiss, 1809 - 1893
This artwork's face covers about 35× the area of a tennis ball.Drawn to the same scale.