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  • Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

    A Battle Scene's Full Circle

    Torched, Torn, Tattered and Trimmed, Massive Painting of Gettysburg Enjoys Restoration and Return to Prominence

    By Michael E. Ruane

    The Washington Post [Washington, D.C.]
    August 12, 2007

    GETTYSBURG, Pa. "Everybody ready?" asks the chief art conservator, David L. Olin.

    He pauses for a second, then starts the hoist. With the drone of machinery, a segment of the legendary Gettysburg cyclorama, four stories tall, begins to rise up the wall and back to life.

    There, in a corner of the painting, is the famous black dog howling eternally over the body of a slain soldier. Nearby, two men with a stretcher again carry a wounded comrade, whose right arm dangles over the side. In the center, horsemen gallop in the perpetual shadow of battle smoke.

    As the canvas clears the floor, it falls into place with a soft whoosh. Applause breaks out among the art conservators and bystanders. There are tears, hugs, whoops and handshakes.

    "It's up," says senior conservator Debra Selden of this Gilded Age wonder, an Imax of its time.

    At last.

    The depiction of the Battle of Gettysburg's climactic moment has begun the final stages of its return. The circular oil painting survived 124 years of use and abuse. It has been restored in an $11.2 million, four-year conservation program and will be the showpiece of a new $7.5 million building at Gettysburg National Military Park.

    Last week, a Great Falls-based firm, Olin Conservation Inc., assisted by a team of Polish cyclorama experts, raised the first of 14 sections of the painting inside the huge new circular structure that will house it.

    A gang of conservators -- shoeless to avoid damaging the canvas -- spent all day Wednesday preparing and maneuvering the 26-foot-wide, 950-pound section into place.

    At one point, it had to be flipped from its face-down position with a big aluminum roller. It was then hauled up a kind of launching ramp and clamped into the curved steel and oak bracket, or cornice, from which it would hang. Bracket and painting were hoisted to the ceiling with cables and chains.

    The project is the work of a partnership between the National Park Service, which oversees the battlefield, and a private, nonprofit fundraising organization called the Gettysburg Foundation. The aim is to build a modern museum and visitor complex, restore and re-house the cyclorama, tear down the old visitor buildings nearby and return that landscape to its Civil War-era appearance.

    The new $103 million, barn-red visitor complex, designed to suggest a Pennsylvania farm, is scheduled to open next spring, project officials said.

    Work on the cyclorama, including preparation, hanging and assembly of the remaining 13 segments, will keep the roughly 377-foot-long canvas closed to the public until fall 2008.

    The 1884 painting, executed by French artist Paul Philippoteaux, once hung in pieces in a Newark department store. And until 2005, when it was closed to the public, it had been on display for more than 40 years in the old 1960s-era cyclorama building here.

    Last week was a milestone in its often hazardous journey across history.

    "This is absolutely incredible," senior paintings conservator Maura Duffy said as the first section was readied for its resurrection. "It's a dream come true."

    Cyclorama paintings were the rage in the mid- to late 1800s, a kind of mass entertainment of their time. They required special buildings to display them in all their majesty. Many cities in the United States and Europe had cyclorama or panorama buildings, and the huge paintings, often of epic battles, made the rounds like blockbuster movies.

    The paintings were big moneymakers and so popular that season tickets were available.

    Washington had at least two panorama buildings. One, a round structure about five stories tall, was on 15th Street NW, two blocks south of the Treasury Building. In the 1880s and '90s, crowds gathered there to visit cycloramas of the battles of Gettysburg and Shiloh and the Second Battle of Bull Run.

    An old photograph of the building, with the Washington Monument in the distance, shows it emblazoned with advertisements for the Bull Run painting.

    Nine "Gettysburgs" once were on the cyclorama circuit, according to Susan Boardman, museum coordinator for the Gettysburg Foundation and historical consultant on the cyclorama project.

    Four were executed by Philippoteaux, she said. The first was installed in Chicago. The one now at Gettysburg was his second and was originally created for Boston.

    Philippoteaux did others in 1886 for New York and Philadelphia. The New York version was displayed in Washington's panorama building, according to Boardman.

    Philippoteaux's cycloramas were considered fairly accurate and emotionally effective at the time.

    "It is simply wonderful," Union Gen. John Gibbon, who had fought in the battle, wrote after seeing the one in Chicago in 1884. "I never before had an idea that the eye could be so deceived by paint (and) canvas."

    The cyclorama in Gettysburg includes several historical figures, along with a self-portrait of Philippoteaux, who is shown leaning against a tree with a saber in his hand.

    The artist was first hired to produce a Gettysburg cyclorama by Chicago businessman Charles Willoughby, Boardman said. Such paintings were usually executed by teams of artists with certain specialties. One, for example, might be good at painting horses, Boardman said. Another might excel at landscapes or people or faces.

    She said in 1881 and 1882, Philippoteaux, then in his mid-30s, visited Gettysburg and hired local photographer William H. Tipton to take pictures of the battlefield. Many of the photographs survive, she said, and depict a pristine battlefield before "the monumentation craze" of a few years later.

    Philippoteaux also came to Washington to research the battle and examine maps.

    He returned to France to start work. Philippoteaux painted a small version of the painting, which shows Pickett's Charge, the m ain Confederate attack on the last day of the battle, July 3, 1863. Then he set his team to painting a hugely expanded copy.

    Boardman said the version now in Gettysburg might have been painted, or at least completed, inside the Boston building where it was to be displayed. "No one knows for sure," she said. His remaining two were painted in the United States.

    Only two of the Gettysburg cycloramas are believed to still exist. Besides the one at the battle site, Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, N.C., recently announced the sale to anonymous buyers of what it said was Philippoteaux's first "Gettysburg." The university said a local artist left it to the school when he died in 1996. The artist, Joseph Wallace King, said he had found the painting in 1965 behind a wall in a burned-out Chicago warehouse.

    The painting now in Gettysburg has a tangled history. It was taken off exhibit in Boston in 1890. Later it fell on hard times, doomed by the arrival of movies.

    It was cut into 27 sections and placed in a 50-foot-long wooden crate in a vacant lot in Boston. There, vandals twice set it afire, and it was exposed to the elements, Boardman said.

    In the early 1900s, Albert Hahne, the Newark department store owner, acquired the painting and displayed much of it in his store. Then came the move to Pennsylvania. In 1913, the 50th anniversary of the battle, Hahne and other investors built an unheated, tile-covered building on Cemetery Hill in Gettysburg and put the painting on display. "And it never left," Boardman said.

    The National Park Service, realizing the painting's cultural value, acquired it in 1942 and, with the approach of the 100th battle anniversary in 1963, had it restored and installed in a then-new ultra-modern visitor center/cyclorama building. The 1913 structure on Cemetery Hill was demolished.

    But that was nearly a half-century ago. Now the 1960s building has grown ragged and outdated, and it is due to be torn down.

    Throughout, the painting has survived -- battered, patched, trimmed, carved up, touched up and now getting new life.

    With all that, as conservator Mary Wootton said last week: "It really is a treasure."




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

  • #2
    Re: Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

    Saving Survivors From the Field of Battle

    By Linda Wheeler

    The Washington Post [Washington, D.C.]
    August 12, 2007

    The field desk looked as if it had been cobbled together without much thought of making it attractive. It was strictly functional and probably would not draw much attention at an antique shop. But at the Harpers Ferry conservation lab for the National Park Service, it was treated as a treasured icon: It had belonged to Gen. Robert E. Lee and was most likely used at the Battle of Gettysburg.

    Larry Bowers, who specializes in conserving wooden objects, was in charge of the desk.

    "It is very modest and fairly crude, but it is what a soldier would have wanted in the field," Bowers said. "It is not high style. The coolest thing about it is that General Lee used it."

    The worn and chipped black desk, with its interior pigeonholes for notes and writing paper, will ascend to star status next year when it is prominently displayed in the $103 million Museum and Visitor Center at Gettysburg National Military Park, scheduled to open in April. The complex will also house the park's 365-foot cyclorama painting and its collection of more than 300,000 objects and artifacts and 700,000 documents.

    The Gettysburg Foundation, a private, nonprofit educational organization, is raising the funds for the complex, in partnership with the Park Service. Foundation President Robert C. Wilburn said the museum galleries will be arranged so that a visitor sees the exhibits in the context of the war. The planned galleries include causes of the Civil War, approach to the war, the three days of battle and the Gettysburg Address.

    "The objects will be displayed in the period in which the event occurred," Wilburn said. "At present, there is no context. Things are just grouped together. We are changing that to help the visitor."

    Lee's battered, ink-stained desk will be in Gallery 5, the exhibit area themed "Campaign to Pennsylvania: Testing Whether That Nation Can Long Endure." The gallery names are taken from phrases Abraham Lincoln used in his famous address.

    Bowers said that when conserving the desk and other objects, the plan is never to make them look new or even particularly tidy.

    "The idea is to do as little as possible, to be as uninvasive as possible," he said.

    Bowers is used to working with delicate old wood. In his spare time, he is a violin maker.

    The desk had been in storage since 1971, when the Park Service purchased the building in Gettysburg -- now its museum -- and the contents of a private collection housed there. The desk was built in two pieces so it could travel easily in wagons. Bowers gently cleaned the desk, removing dead bugs and old nests but leaving the ink stains and chipped paint. He did a small repair to the leaf that folds out to create a writing surface. A hinge had pulled loose, damaging the wood where it had been screwed in.

    He also removed all the metal pieces, cleaned them and coated them with hot microcrystalline wax, a synthetic material, that will keep them from tarnishing.

    The desk is ready for exhibit, and Bowers has moved on to conserving a chest of drawers that came from a Gettysburg home and was hit twice by bullets during the battle.

    Elsewhere in the lab, conservation on other star attractions for the new museum is taking place. They include the litter that carried the wounded Lt. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson off the Chancellorsville battlefield, a 34-star flag missing most of its stripes, a decorative apron resembling the U.S. flag and a wooden bed used by Lee in the field. None has been displayed before.

    A pocket-size, leather-bound prayer book, which had been exhibited at the Gettysburg museum, also received attention. Pvt. John Cassidy of the 69th Pennsylvania Infantry was defending the Union line along a stone wall, known now as the Angle, during Pickett's Charge on July 3 when a bullet slammed into the book and his chest, killing him.

    Park Service records are not clear about how the little book ended up at the Gettysburg museum, but it is one of the prized possessions. Its cover is darkened by much handling. The front lower corners are worn away, and the bottom of the spine is frayed, as though it had been shoved into Cassidy's breast pocket many times.

    The bullet struck just above the middle near the right front edge, leaving a tunnel in the leather and paper.

    Cassidy's prayer book, similar to religious books sold by sutlers at campsites, will have a prominent position in the gallery devoted to the third day of the battle. Nearby will be the spurs Gen. George E. Pickett wore at Gettysburg.




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

      Cyclorama painting restored to original shape

      By MATT CASEY

      Hanover Evening Sun [Hanover, Penn.]
      January 3, 2008

      Even if you've seen the Cyclorama painting at the Gettysburg National Military Park, you've never seen it like this.

      Conservators recently pulled together the 360-degree painting's 14 panels, and restored its original hourglass shape.

      "Basically, right now, this is the one and only hyperbolically shaped cyclorama painting in America," said David Olin, the conservator in charge of the project.

      The 377-foot painting stands 42 feet high and displays a panorama of Pickett's Charge, the pivotal July 3, 1863, encounter where Union troops defeated a Confederate infantry assault.

      Olin said the Gettysburg Cyclorama painting has had a difficult life. After its initial display, Olin said, it was cut into pieces that were shipped to art shows across the country.

      The National Park Service later hung the painting in the soon-to-be demolished Cyclorama building, where it stayed for 40 years.

      Even there, though, the painting's woes hadn't ended, Olin said.

      The painting hung flat, Olin said, which stressed the paint.

      Artist Paul Philippoteaux and a team of 20 created the work on a curved surface the conservators are working to recreate, Olin said, and any change in a canvases shape will encourage paint to wear off.
      Returning the painting to that shape will help preserve it for future generations, Olin said.

      Further work will include painting in cracks and gaps in the painting, and recreating large portions of the painting that are missing.

      The painting wasn't meant to last so long, Olin said, and the paint the artists used has dulled in the past 123 years.

      That leaves him and the other conservators to try to recreate the look of the aged and weathered painting with a palate of different kinds of paint.

      Olin and his team will also recreate 14 feet of sky, and about half of a panel lost decades ago, possibly due to damage incurred during storage.

      No photographs of the panel exist, he said, but a similar painting hangs in Atlanta and his team will use photos of that painting to approximate what Gettysburg's Cyclorama used to look like.

      Olin said his team plans to project images of the other painting on the blank panel to serve as a guide.
      Olin said it's exciting to work on such a large project. There are few paintings in the world weighing more than 12 tons. And at $11.2 million, Olin said the restoration far outsizes typical repair work, which usually tops out at $200,000 to $300,000.

      He called working on such a project "a love affair."

      The conservators he recruited from Poland previously worked on European cyclorama paintings, and readily agreed to temporarily relocate to the United States so they could work on another.

      Olin credited Ryszard Wójtowicz, a member of the restoration team, for keeping the project on schedule.

      Standing behind the painting -- in an area currently accessible only by crawling under the heavy metal hoop that hangs at its bottom - Olin pointed to a seam between original pieces of canvas from the 1884 painting.

      Faint lines straddled the seam, in what Olin described as a "surgical" stitch. Conservators guide the threads so precisely that they don't breach the front of the painting.

      Olin held his hands about a foot apart. That much, he said, took conservators about an hour to mend together on a flat surface. The remaining seams will have to be mended while the painting hangs about 42 feet high from the ceiling, and the conservators work from mechanical baskets.

      Still, Olin said he's confident the painting will be ready for public exhibition in September - thanks to the conservators' meticulous attention to detail.

      He pointed to the painting's horizon line as an example. Small orange stickers on the edges of each painting indicate where the horizon should be, and they line up nearly perfectly.

      "Our accuracy is within an eighth of an inch," Olin said.

      HOW IT WORKS:

      David Olin, owner of Olin Conservation Inc. and lead conservator on the Cyclorama restoration project, said the painting's hourglass shape is more than a visual enhancement - it's a matter of physics.

      Olin said any cylinder of fabric under tension will bow in at the middle, and he described an experiment that can be done at home.

      Load a pair of glasses with their mouths pointing toward each other into a tube sock, then, holding then securely through the sock, pull the glasses away from each other and watch what happens.

      That same shape will help the Cyclorama presentation feel more "immersive," Olin said. In combination with dioramas that will be erected in front of the painting, it will create an illusion of depth.




      Eric
      Eric J. Mink
      Co. A, 4th Va Inf
      Stonewall Brigade

      Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

        Outstanding! Wish it were to be in place for those of us traversing to Andersburg to see this summer. Will have to enjoy it another time.
        Thanks for sharing.
        Paul Hadley
        Paul Hadley

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        • #5
          Re: Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

          Cyclorama, museum to magnify spirit of Gettysburg park

          By Tom Barnes

          Pittsburgh Post-Gazette [Pittsburgh, Penn.]
          January 13, 2008

          GETTYSBURG -- A visit to the 6,000-acre Gettysburg National Military Park, where 51,000 Union and Confederate soldiers were killed, wounded, captured or missing in three days of fierce fighting in July 1863, has always been a moving experience.

          But trips to this hallowed ground, considered the turning point of the Civil War, will soon get even better for the nearly 2 million sightseers, tourists and history buffs who stop here each year.

          Two major improvements are almost completed after two years of work. In early April, a new $103 million museum and visitors center will open. Then in late September, the famous Cyclorama -- a 360-degree, 42-foot-high painting depicting the bloody but unsuccessful charge led by Confederate Gen. George Pickett -- will be back on public display after an extensive restoration.

          The centerpiece of the visitor center is a tall, 10-sided structure clad in red insulated metal, somewhat resembling a big barn. Other sections of the visitors center also stick with the rural agricultural look, with a gray stone exterior, common to many old farmhouses in southcentral Pennsylvania.

          The "barn" will contain the two most important features for visitors: a new museum, with 11 separate galleries outlining the events that led up to the Battle of Gettysburg and detailing each of the three days of bloody fighting, and a 35-foot-high escalator leading up to a circular platform from which visitors can view the Cyclorama .

          The new center is two-thirds of a mile from an old house that has served as the welcome center since 1972. The current welcome center can accommodate about 400,000 people per year, while Gettysburg visitation has grown far beyond that.

          The new center will open by April 15, with the exact date to be announced soon, said Dru Neil, a spokeswoman for the Gettysburg Foundation, a nonprofit group helping the National Park Service oversee the project's construction.

          The Gettysburg Foundation is raising $125 million for the project to build and maintain the new museum and visitors center and rehabilitate the painting. The funds include $20 million from the state, $15 million from the federal government and the rest private.

          The new museum should be popular with Civil War junkies because it will have 11 historical galleries, each one named after phrases spoken by President Abraham Lincoln in his famous Gettysburg Address of November 1863.

          Different galleries will have pictures and documents of the years leading up to the Civil War. One will focus on the Civil War from 1861 to 1863. Its title will be Mr. Lincoln's words of "Now we are engaged in a great civil war."

          Another gallery will focus solely on battle, titled, "Now we are met on a great battlefield of that war." It will have information on the day before the battle started, with additional galleries detailing each of the three days of the battle.

          The last gallery, called "Never forget what they did here," will outline ongoing efforts to preserve the battlefield.

          The architects for the new museum and visitors center were LSC Design of York. They thought the design should reflect the Pennsylvania farmland and agricultural buildings, said Ms. Neil.

          The new center will also be filled with important historical artifacts, such as a portable wooden desk believed to have been used by Confederate commander Gen. Robert E. Lee during the battle, and a journal used by Adams County physician Dr. John O'Neal to identity the locations of several thousand dead Confederate soldiers.

          There are also two theaters where re-created movies of the battle will be shown, an education center for youth groups, a food court, a bookstore and museum shop and an area for unloading the dozens of buses filled with schoolchildren who arrive here.

          The date for the Cyclorama unveiling has already been set: Sept. 26. Visitors and tourists once again will be able to view the panoramic painting portraying one of the most famous battles ever fought on American soil, Pickett's Charge. The painting has been out of public display for the past two years, undergoing a $15 million restoration.

          The Cyclorama, painted in 1883-84 by French artist Paul Philippoteaux, shows the intense fighting between the North and South on July 3, 1863, as Confederate soldiers under Pickett's command made a last, desperate gasp for victory before being forced to retreat south the next day.

          The Cyclorama consists of 14 separate panels, which are 42 feet high. The painting would be 377 feet long if stretched out in a straight line.

          Before being taken down for restoration, the Cyclorama had hung for 40 years in a building near the current visitors center. Its corkscrew-shaped interior staircase led visitors up to a platform where the painting could be viewed.

          However, Ms. Neil said, the painting wasn't hung properly, which prevented visitors from seeing it at a proper sight line. The improper hanging also added to the deterioration of the canvas.

          Also, in the old configuration, there were portions of the sky missing, which made the painting not as tall as it should have been. These portions of sky and clouds will be restored before the painting is on view again in September.

          The condition of the canvas had greatly suffered over the years, said David Olin, of Olin Conservation Inc., who is overseeing the restoration.

          Decades ago, the original 14 panels were chopped into 32 smaller pieces. As a result the painting "was not able to hang properly," Mr. Olin said. In the early part of the 20th century, the painting was "rolled up and cut and stored in various places," causing damage to the paint and the canvas. "We had to mend torn and rotted sections of canvas."

          There had been three previous restoration efforts, but the current one started in November 2003. Once the painting returns to public view, it will be the first time in more than 100 years that it will be displayed in its original curved, or "hyperbolic," shape, he said.

          "We will put visitors back into the time of the battle," said Mr. Olin. "People will get a sense of 'wow.' People need to allow themselves to interact with the painting."

          The long escalator will bring tourists up to and down from a circular platform, positioned in the middle of the painting.

          The Gettysburg Cyclorama is one of only about a dozen such massive circular paintings in the world, Mr. Olin added.

          Eventually, the current visitor center and the building that used to house the Cyclorama will be razed and the land will be returned to the way it appeared on July 1-3, 1863.

          Nothing new will be built on the land because "over 900 Union soldiers were killed, wounded or captured during the fighting on the land where the existing visitors center is located. We didn't want to further intrude on the ground where those soldiers had died," said Katie Lawhon, spokeswoman for the Gettysburg National Military Park.

          No soldiers died on the land where the new visitors center is located, Ms. Neil said.

          Gettysburg Foundation officials are confident that the two new additions will create "a new Gettysburg experience," said Ms. Neil.

          "Our goal, working with the National Park Service, is to ensure that visitors have an inspiring visit. We hope they go away wanting to learn more about what happened here and how important it was in our country's history."




          Eric
          Eric J. Mink
          Co. A, 4th Va Inf
          Stonewall Brigade

          Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

            Hello,

            What was the fate of the 2nd Mannassas Cyclorama?

            Benjamin McGee

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Cyclorama and Museum Progress at Gettysburg

              Originally posted by benjaminmcgee View Post
              What was the fate of the 2nd Mannassas Cyclorama?
              It's fate remains unknown - http://nps-vip.net/history/museum/cycloram/painting.htm

              Eric
              Eric J. Mink
              Co. A, 4th Va Inf
              Stonewall Brigade

              Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

              Comment

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