Síh-Chidä, Mandan Man
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Artist
Karl BodmerBirth and death dates
1809 - 1893Artist Nationality
SwissTitle
Síh-Chidä, Mandan ManDate
December 8, 1833Dimensions
17 1/16 × 12 in. (43.3 × 30.5 cm)Medium
Watercolor and graphite on paperInstitution
Joslyn Art MuseumCredit Line
Gift of the Enron Art FoundationAccession Number
1986.49.267Rights (i.e. copyright information)
Joslyn Art MuseumPhotographer credit
Photograph © Bruce M. White, 2019Commentary
Maximilian and Bodmer became very fond of this twenty-five-year-old man, whose name means "Yellow Feather." Síh-Chidä was fascinated by the art work of the two foreigners and asked for a drawing of soldiers by Maximilian, for a bird to be painted on his war shield, and for a copy of his portrait by Bodmer which had been done over a period of three days in early December, 1833. He also requested and was given art supplies with which he produced pictures of Maximilian, Bodmer, himself, and his comrades. A number of Indian drawings associated with the Maximilian Bodmer collection at the Joslyn Art Museum are believed to be by Síh-Chidä. On his temples Síh-Chidä wears the popular beaded hair bows with long strings of dentalium shells and beads. He was a member of the Dog Society, and the cluster of feathers on the back of his head may be an insignia of that group, the paraphernalia of which included headdresses of raven, magpie, and owl feathers. Around his neck is draped a tippet of otter fur, the ends fringed with quill-wrapped leather. His heel trailers are also made of otter fur lined with red cloth and, like the wolves' tails seen in other portraits, represent battle exploits. Síh-Chidä appears in the aquatint atlas in Tableau 20 posed beside Máhchsi-Karéhde, the Mandan portrayed in Plate 309.
References in Journal
December 8, 1833Labels:
portraitApproximate Depicted Location:
Fort Clark, North Dakota