Hotokáneheh, Piegan Blackfeet Man
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Artist
Karl BodmerBirth and death dates
1809 - 1893Artist Nationality
SwissTitle
Hotokáneheh, Piegan Blackfeet ManDate
August 1833Dimensions
11 15/16 × 17 1/16 in. (30.3 × 43.3 cm)Medium
Watercolor and graphite on paperInstitution
Joslyn Art MuseumCredit Line
Gift of the Enron Art FoundationAccession Number
1986.49.288Rights (i.e. copyright information)
Joslyn Art MuseumPhotographer credit
Photograph © Bruce M. White, 2019Commentary
Hotokáneheh ("Head of the Buffalo Skin") posed for a portrait over a period of several days in August of 1833 . He is shown here holding the stem of a medicine pipe decorated with eagle and other feathers, cloth, beads, horsehair, and flat projections that could be woodpecker bills. The stems were regarded as the most powerful portions of the several medicine pipes maintained by the Blackfeet. Each stem was kept in its own sacred bundle with related ritual objects. They were associated with war, healing, and the welfare of the people. It was a great responsibility to be the owner or keeper of a medicine pipe, and Maximilian remarked on the care with which Hotokáneheh unwrapped his sacred charge. Hotokáneheh's portrait was not reproduced for the aquatint atlas, but a drawing of the medicine pipe was incorporated into Tableau 48, one of the plates showing a variety of artifacts.
References in Journal
August 13, 1833Labels:
portraitApproximate Depicted Location:
Fort McKenzie, Montana