Stomíck-Sosáck, Blood Blackfeet Chief

Description

Stomíck-Sosáck was an important Blood chief, probably about fifty years old at the time this sketch was done at Fort McKenzie in September, 1833. Maximilian's translation of Stomíck-Sosáck is "Bull's Hide." Catlin, who met and painted the chief in 1832, gives the name as "Bull's Back Fat." It is this name by which he is more commonly remembered. Stomíck-Sosáck was in a hurry that day in September, and Bodmer had to work quickly. His portrait nonetheless conveys the same quiet dignity as Catlin's more elaborate rendering. The chief is wearing a shirt made of red cloth and painted skin and a peace medal suspended from a beaded cord around his neck. Maximilian tells us that the medal bears the image of President Jefferson, though Bodmer here has portrayed the obverse, showing the traditional clasped hands and crossed tomahawk and pipe. Stomíck-Sosáck was pictured in Tableau 46 of the aquatints along with two other Blackfeet chiefs.

Original German Title

None

Medium

watercolor and pencil on paper

Dimensions

12 3/8 x 9 3/4

Call No.

JAM.1986.49.286

Approximate Date of Creation

September 1833