Emmanuel Fremiet, born in Paris on December 24, 1824 and died in Paris on September 10, 1910, is a French sculptor. ... In 1853, Frémiet, "the greatest animal sculptor of his time" exhibited bronze sculptures representing bassets by Napoleon III at the Paris Salon.
Most of the time, White's watercolor paintings definitely did not portray calmness because his paintings often portrayed Native Americans at war, hunting, or partaking in sacrifice. They definitely documented the lives of Woodland peoples...he acted as an artist mapmaker, documenting the Native American culture surrounding him. Though some of his pieces did portray European culture, they were vastly outnumbered by those portraying Native American culture.
The answer is, therefore, "They documented the lives of Woodland peoples"