Wanderings Of An Artist : Among The Indians Of North America : From Canada To Vancouver Island And Oregon Through The Hudson's Bay Company's Territory And Back Again

Kane, Paul. Introductions by J.G MacGregor and Lawrence J. Burpee

Rutland, 1968

By Tuttle

$35.00
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Details

Hardcover with dust jacket, 329 pages, 6x8.5 in, [15.5x21.5 cm], B&W illustrations. Originally published in 1859 by Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans and Roberts, a Revised Edition was published in 1925 by the Radisson Society, this copy a 1968 Tuttle printing.

Condition

Pinhead sized stain on blank front endpaper. Corners of the dust jacket's front flap clipped; booksellers label attached to the front flap. Dust jacket rubbed, torn, edge-worn, creased, sunned, and lightly stained,

Notes

Paul Kane (1810–1871) was born in Mallow, County Cork, Ireland, and immigrated with his family to Upper Canada in 1819. Largely self-taught as a painter, he studied briefly in Europe before returning to Toronto, inspired by the work of American artist George Catlin. Determined to document the Indigenous peoples and landscapes of the Canadian West, Kane secured permission from Sir George Simpson of the Hudson’s Bay Company to travel through it's territories.

Between 1846 and 1848, Kane undertook an ambitious journey from Toronto to the Pacific Coast and back, travelling by canoe, horseback, and on foot. His route took him through the Great Lakes, across the prairies to Fort Edmonton, over the Rockies to Fort Vancouver near present-day Portland, and eventually back east via York Factory and Lake Superior. Along the way, he encountered and sketched numerous Indigenous nations.

Wanderings of an Artist is Kane’s record of this journey.