“Panorama painting seems all the rage.”
John Constable, 1803
Letter to John Dunthorne from John Constable, May 23,
1803 in R.B. Beckett, ed., John Constable's Correspondence II:
Early Friends and Maria Bicknell (Mrs. Constable), (Ipswich:
Suffolk Records Society, Vol. VI, 1964), p. 34.
During the panorama craze of the early 1800s, audiences
flocked by the thousands to witness the latest spectacular representatives
of nature, battle scenes, and exotic locations in 360 degree painted
panoramas displayed in purpose-built circular rotundas. Popular interest
in the panorama and its multiple spin-offs--the most notable being the
horizontal moving panorama--waxed and waned throughout the century.
As a result of exhibit competetion spin-off names were coined including
cosmorama, noctorama, diomonorama, paleorama, pleorama, georama, caricaturama,
and mareorama.
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Section of
the Rotunda, Leicester Square, 1801. Burford's Panorama, Leicester
Square: cross section (acquatint from Robert Mitchell's
Plans and Views in Perspective of Buildings Erected in England
and Scotland, 1901).
Mitchell was the panorama's architect. Notice that several panoramas
could be exhibited in viewing apartments stacked on on top of the
other.
[Click here for
larger image] |
The origin of the panorama can be traced to 1787 and the
Scotsman Robert Barker who saw this medium as a "kind of pattern
for organizing visual experience." It was adopted and independently
produced by several European painters around this period.
The contemporary spectator described a shiver running down his spine
upon entering the panorama rotunda, witnessing the reality of the depicted
scene. Vanessa Schwartz argues in her study of early mass culture that
the panorama's illusion "lay not so much in the actual quality
of the panorama's realistic representation of a particular place ( for
few in the audience would have stood before the acual site and therefore
could judge the quality of the copy) as in its technological illusionism."Vanessa
R. Schwartz, Spectacular Realities: EarlyMass Culture in Fin-de-Siecle
France. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), p.153.
The effect of total immersion in the depicted scene was enhanced by
the panorama's skillful manipulation of perspective, lighting, and as
in the case of the panorama of London painted from the top of St. Paul's
Cathedral installed at the London Colosseum, three dimensional effects
via mock-ups of the rooftop of St. Paul's that blended with the 2-D
foreground of the painting to create the allusion of additional depth.
Like the present day curved and almost endless Imas Solido screen, 360
panoramas had no visible edges and appearred to go on forever.
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Picture of the Panorama
Building, p. 134 or 133 ( Altick, The Shows of
London)
The effect of total immersion in the depicted scene was enhanced
by the panorama’s skillful manipulation of perspective, lighting,
and as in the case of the panorama of London painted from the top
of St. Paul’s Cathedral installed at the London Colosseum,
three dimensional effects via mock-ups of the rooftop of St. Paul’s
that blended with the 2-D foreground of the painting to create the
allusion of additional depth. Like the present day curved and almost
endless Imas Solido screen, most 360 panoramas had no visible edges
and appeared to go on forever.
[Click here for
larger image] |
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Panorama of London—observation
tower.
[Click here for larger image]
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Opened in 1794 the panorama building according to Richard Altick “was
so designed that two of the forces which militate against perfect illusion
in a gallery painting—the limiting frame and standards of size
and distance external to the picture itself—were eliminated…The
intrusive elements of the spectator’s surroundings being blacked
out, the world in which they were entwined consisted exclusively of
the landscape or cityscape depicted on the canvas suspended thirty feet
away.” (Richard Altick, The Shows of London (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1978), p.132-3).
The effect of going from darkness into the naturally lit circular rotunda
was meant to heighten the sensation of standing out of doors and viewing
a scene as if one had virtually traveled there in the time it took to
enter the building. Audiences would then spend approximately 15 to 20
minutes viewing the panorama from one (or possibly two) observation
platforms that charged different rates for entry.
The popularity of panoramas and their precarious status as legitimate
art works was determined in part by the role panoramists occupied in
the art world, making their living as artists outside the traditional
networks of patronage and public exposure. Because illusionism was the
primary goal of the panorama, it was judged inferior to serious art,
although the panorama certainly played an influential role in the subject
matter and scale of landscape painters of the eighteenth century.
Information booklets vouched for the accuracy of the depicted scene
(as did panorama advertisements) informing potential spectators that
the panorama was painted from sketches taken by the artist “on
the spot.” Claims of accuracy and mathematical precision in copying
techniques were typical of the promotional writing around panoramas,
often accompanied by tales of personal risk, expense and hardship in
procuring sketches.
Reviewers were also often generous with praise for the accuracy of
the depiction. A review in The Living Age of “The
Panorama of Hong-Kong” in 1844 stated “A nearer approach
by art to reality has never been witnessed; and the great merit of the
panorama is, that while a genuine Chinese view, with all its most striking
characteristics, is presented, the materials are selected with a painter’s
skill, and so managed as to form a most harmonious picture.”
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Cover
of: The Colosseum Handbook: descriptive of the cyclorama of Paris
by Night, now on exhibition S.E. corner Broad & Locust Streets.
Philadelphia, PA: Allen, Lane & Scott, 1876.
[Click here for larger
image] |
Like many twentieth-century technologies of imaging and electronics,
including iPIX, the panorama has its roots in military research. Based
on drawings supplied by army officers, panoramists such as Robert Burford
used “prospect formats,” the eighteenth-century pictorial
records of coastlines and land masses, for his painted panoramas of
Benares, Delhi, and Hong-Kong. Similarly, iPIX, which developed as a
Small Business Innovation Research contract through the Langley Research
Center, originated with the support of NASA who used the technology
for guiding robots in their shuttle and space station programs, and
the US Department of Energy, who needed technology that could offer
them remote viewing of potentially hazardous environments.
Moving panoramas, which were vertical strips of canvas that were unfurled
from one cylinder to another at the opposite end of a stage created
the sensation of travel through simulated journeys, often by river.
Mississippi River panoramist John Banvard coined the term “Georama”
in 1853 to describe his latest geographic panorama, which offered audiences
tours through the world’s most exotic locales.
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"A Painting Three
Miles Long," The Living Age. Vol. 14, issue 176,
pp594-595
“ His [John
Banvard] grand object, as he himself informs us, was to falsify
the assertion, that America had “no artists commensurate
with the grandeur and extent of her scenery,” and to accomplish
this, by producing the largest painting in the world!”
“When the preparatory drawings were completed, he erected
a building at Louisville in Kentucky, where he at length commenced
his picture, which was to be a panorama of the Mississippi,
painted on canvass, three miles long; …”
[Click
here for image]
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"John
Banvard's Great Picture--Life on the Mississippi,"
The Living Age, Vol. 15, issue 187, p.511-514
[Click
here for image]
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The sensation of walking into and around a giant picture, of literally
being placed at its center, has resurfaced in the context of iPIX, although
the walking done here is with one’s computer mouse. According
to iPIX CEO Jim Philips, “Everyone we’ve showed this to
says it’s like teleportation. It’s using ordinary cameras
to give viewers the ability to literally walk into the picture.”
(Shira Levine, “A Web Walk: iPIX Brings 3-D to the Internet,”
Telephony, August 18, 1997, n.p.)
http://infomedia.ipix.com/
There existed the idea that the panorama is both “deceptive”
and correct. A London Times reviewer of the Panorama
of Paris exhibited at the Colosseum in 1848 began by arguing that
“nothing can be more perfectly deceptive nor minutely
correct than this view…[of] the Hotel de Ville, the Colonne
de Juillet, the Arc de l’Etoile, and the Tuileries.”