Mató-Tópe, Mandan Chief

Description

Mató-Tópe ("Four Bears") was a prominent Mandan chief, popular among his people and respected for his many war exploits. Discussed at length in the writings of both Maximilian and George Catlin, he was one of the best known Indian personalities of the early nineteenth century. He was featured in numerous art works by Catlin, and two Bodmer portraits of him appeared in the aquatint atlas as Tableaus 13 and 14. These were based on the watercolors shown here and in Plate 318. Mató-Tópe closely observed Catlin and Bodmer at work and was himself an enthusiastic painter. He represented his battle feats on his person, on his clothing, and on buffalo robes; see Plate 341 for an example of the latter. In the collection there is at least one watercolor sketch by Mató-Tópe, and he presumably painted the drum reproduced by Bodmer in Plate 344. Maximilian remarked that Mató-Tópe wore something different almost every time he visited him, which was often. In this portrait he is dressed as befits his rank. His new shirt is made of bighorn leather, elaborately trimmed with ermine tails, locks of hair, and long panels of bead-outlined quillwork. On the shoulders of the shirt he has painted symbols of brave deeds. The red spattered marks on the front recall old wounds. Usually the number of eagle feathers a man wore on his head signified the number of battle coups he had made, but an impressive headdress like this one might represent instead the combined coups of a war party or perhaps of an entire men's society. Mató-Tópe wore this bonnet when he rode at the head of the Half-Shorn Society on April 31 1834. In any event it is clear that the honor of wear,ing such a bonnet was reserved for the most distinguished leaders. The lance may be another emblem of achievement: the spear with which Catlin says Mató-Tópe killed the Arikara murderer of his brother, the shaft adorned with the scalp of that enemy stretched on a hoop.

Medium

watercolor on paper

Dimensions

16 1/2 x 11 5/8

Call No.

JAM.1986.49.383

Approximate Date of Creation

14th April 1834