Bodmer was born in Switzerland
and studied art in Paris. In 1832 he was asked to be the artist for the German
Prince Maximilian's expedition across the American West. The artist was commissioned
to make detailed illustrations of the life, habits and customs of the Indians.
By 1833, the company had reached St. Louis where they decided to come under
the protection of John Jacob Astor's Fur Company and travel up the Missouri
River by steamboat. During this trip Bodmer recorded events occurring in the
present states of Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana and Wyoming.
Bodmer sketched Indians and their surroundings at every stop. While in Nebraska
during the Spring of 1834 the steamboat stopped near present day Bellevue
for trading purposes. The Prince arid Bodmer took this opportunity to observe
the Omaha Indians and their cattle. Bodmer created several paintings of Indian
subjects and river scenes from this stop. Bodmer is known for his careful
observation and attention to detail. Unlike some other artists in the American
West he tried not to romanticize his subjects but show them as they really
were. In 1834 Bodmer returned to Barbizon, France where he finished 81 paintings
to illustrate his journal of the trip. He also completed many of the plates
used for the prints that he had executed from these works. He exhibited at
the Paris Salon beginning in 1836 and became known for his forest landscapes
and depictions of birds and mammals. By the time of his death, Bodmer's Indian
prints were entirely forgotten.