THE
HENRY BOSSE COLLECTION
HENRY PETER BOSSE (1844 - 1903) is widely recognized as one of the two or three most important photographers of the Mississippi River, and the most important from the nineteenth century. He extensively photographed the Upper Mississippi from 1883 to 1893, a time of unprecedented environmental and social change. His work was practically unknown until a century later when a major album of his work was rediscovered. Since then, his photographs have been exhibited at the Smithsonian and other national museums and purchased by numerous public and private art collections around the world including, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Amon Carter Museum of Art, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the National Museum of American Art, and the Minneapolis Institue of Arts.
Boatyard at Wabasha, Minnesota, 1890 Cyanotype Image 11” x 13 1/2” Paper aprx. 14” x 17”
“It was a time of dramatic change on the Mississippi River and in America, and Bosse’s photographs became part of the great commercial and military achievements of the late 1800s. His legacy is secured by rare pictures of a river never to be seen again. The photographs leave the modern viewer with a sense of nostaliga, a yearning for the natural river that was lost to the forces of commerce.” —Merry A. Foresta Views on the Mississippi
From Hills at Dallas City, Illinois Looking Down Stream, 1889 Cyanotype Image 11” x 13 1/2” Paper aprx. 14” x 17”
“Henry Bosse’s photographs are more than just art. They chronicle the first systematic effort to recast the upper Mississippi from a natural river into a modern commercial highway...” —John O. Anfinson Henry Bosse’s Views of the Upper Mississippi River
Breakwater at Stockholm, Wisconsin, 1889 Cyanotype Image 11” x 13 1/2” Paper aprx. 14” x 17”
It is a strange study, a singular phenomenon, if you please, that the only real, independent and genuine gentlemen in the world go quietly up and down the Mississippi River, asking no homage of any one, seeking no popularity, no notoriety, and not caring a damn whether school keeps or not. —Mark Twain (in a letter to Will Bowen)
Eagle Point, 1885 Cyanotype Image 11” x 13 1/2” Paper aprx. 14” x 17”
The accession of territory [the Mississippi Territory by the Americans], affirms forever the power of the United States, and I have just given England a maritime rival that sooner or later will lay low her pride. 窶年apoleon Bonaparte
Fort Madison, Iowa, 1885 Cyanotype Image 11” x 13 1/2” Paper aprx. 14” x 17”
In rivers, the water that you touch is the last of what has passed and the first of that which comes; so with present time. —Leonardo da Vinci
Broken Closing Dam in Shokokon Slough, 1891 Cyanotype Image 11” x 13 1/2” Paper aprx. 14” x 17”
UNIQUE HANDMADE ALBUM BY HENRY BOSSE
“Photographs” Album Cover mixed media, ephemera
Bosse’s Christmas Card Pen & Ink drawing
MAJOR ALEXANDER MACKENZIE was a regional commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at the end of the 19th century. MacKenzie oversaw the Corps’ first major navigational improvement of the upper Mississippi; its goal was to allow low–water passage of steamboats between St. Louis and Minneapolis. MacKenzie turned to Henry Bosse, his chief draftsman, to document the Corps’ decade-long project.
Untitled (Major Alexander Mackenzie) Toned Gelatin Silver Print 5 1/4� x 3 1/2�
ORIGINAL BOSSE DRAWINGS
MEMBERS OF THE ARMY CORP OF ENGINEERS
THE FOLLOWING seven pages are highlights from a collection of approximately one-hundred and forty prints of photographs attributed to Henry P. Bosse.
Laying Last Stone, 1893 Cyanotype
Lock Pit, St. Mary’s Falls Canal, 1893 Cyanotype
Lock Pit, St. Mary’s Falls Canal, 1893 Cyanotype 7 7/16” x 9 1/2”
Inlet Pipe, 1893 Cyanotype 7 1/2” x 9 1/2”
As an atlas, Henry Bosse’s Views on the Mississippi River is more than a classical map augmented by photographic views. A drawn map is inherently idealized, static. Bosse’s river is the water itself, moving, forever changing, a sequence of encounters and tides, rising and falling...After its publication, there could be no doubt that photography would redefine cartography. —Charles Wehrenberg Henry P. Bosse: American Impressionist
“The great eras in the history of the arts are not eras of increased artistic feeling, but, primarily, of increased technical feeling – a feeling which must originate with the workman. It is above all the first movement which has brought the handicraftsman and the artist together. To separate them would rob the handicraftsman of all the best art he has ever known.” —Oscar Wilde
Untitled (Henry P. Bosse) Toned Gelatin Silver Print 5 1/8” x 3 1/2”