|
Date: |
|
Description: | Text in English below image.
Cleverly painted, masked and lit by daylight from above, these circular panoramas gave the illusion to those standing on the central viewing platform that they were really in the landscape, seascape or battle scene that were the usual subjects. The panorama was invented about 1787 by Robert Barker of Edinburgh. From 1794 to 1863, he and his successors exhibited many such spectacles in ?The Panorama?, his purpose-built premises in Cranbourne Street, Leicester Square, where the largest views ? including this one of Trafalgar, shown in 1806 ? were about 30 feet high by 90 feet across (9 x 27m), on 10,000 square feet (930 sq. m) of canvas.
Many other showmen copied Barker and circular panoramas became common across Europe and America. A few survive (as well as modern ones) but the last large circular panorama of Trafalgar was painted by Philip Fleischer in 1890. It was seen in Edinburgh and Manchester before being shown at the 1891 Royal Naval Exhibition at Chelsea, and then toured on the Continent.
When they met at Palermo in 1799, Nelson thanked Barker for prolonging the fame of the Battle of the Nile in a Leicester Square panorama. This is the printed viewer?s ?key? to the version of Trafalgar painted, in the year of Barker?s death, by his son Henry. It was displayed for over a year from about 14 May 1806 to 25 May 1807.
Box Title: Actions. Trafalgar, 1805.
caption: 'Battle of Trafalgar. Panorama, Leicester Square' | Publisher: | "http://collections.rmg.co.uk/" | Rights holder: | "Royal Museums Greenwich" | Subjects: | Trafalgar Nelson Nelson & Napol�on Nelson's great battles prints | Source: | Royal Museums Greenwich | Identifier: | http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections... | Go to resource |
|
|