By Stephan
Oettermann,
translated by Deborah Lucas Schneider
The
Panorama of Jerusalem and the Crucifixion of Christ
Piglhein’s Panorama
In the mid-1880s a form of rebellion broke out in Munich against one of the major Belgian panorama companies. The parent company had exhibited Louis Braun’s Battle of Weissenburg in their Munich rotunda, but after that they wanted to exhibit only paintings by Belgian artists. Out of patriotic resentment a group of Germans led by Josef Halder (Munich) and Franz Josef Hotop (Dresden) founded a new company on February 1, 1885. In their search for a promising subject for the first picture, they hit upon the idea of a scene of the Crucifixion surrounded by an artist’s reconstruction of Jerusalem as it must have looked at the time. The artist Karl Hubert Frosch, whom they consulted about an appropriate person to paint it, immediately suggested Bruno Piglhein. Piglhein (1848-94) had begun his career as a sculptor but moved on to decorations in the style of Hans Makart and then oil paintings in the manner of Arnold Böcklin. Still later he created something of a sensation in the art world with two interestingly disparate specialities: titillating pastels of female figures – ladies “whose many admirable qualities did not include the appearance of virtue,” as one critic put it – on the one hand, and monumental religious pictures with titles such as The Dying Christ, Madonna, and Moritur in Deo on the other. With the latter he may have been trying to rival Mihaly Munkácsy.
Piglhein accepted the company’s offer to paint
the picture they had in mind for a flat fee of 145,000 marks (out of which he
had to pay all his associates and assistants). While the company began building
a new rotunda in the Goethestrasse in Munich, Piglhein and his collaborators
departed in the spring of 1895 on a field trip to Palestine. In addition to
Karl Frosch, who would be responsible for painting the architectural elements,
and Josef Krieger, a landscape painter, there was a fouth, unnamed associate,
who was soon dismissed for “incompetence”, however. In addition to letters of
recommendation from the papal nuncio and the archbishop of Munich, they took
along an “indispensable companion who could be counted on to record everything,”
namely a camera. Thanks to the pfotographs they had taken, the artists were
able to produce a master sketch for the panorama within a very short time. Work
on the cavas itself, a single piece of Belgian fabric almost 50 feet high and
390 feet long, began on August 1885. Two further painters, Adalbert Heine and
Josef Block, the latter a student of Piglhein’s, were engaged to help out.
After the master sketch had been transferred to the canvas with the aid of a
projector, the main areas of a color were covered with a thin layer of paint.
For the cloudless blue sky, 1,000 pounds of Krem’s white were mixed with 150
pounds of ultramarine in varying amounts to create ninety different shades.
Then it was time to fill in the details. After nine months’ labor the exhibit
was formally opened on May 30, 1886: The “Panorama of Jerusalem with the
Crucifixion of Christ, painted by Prof. Bruno Piglhein.”
It had been a daring venture from the outset;
only a few years earlier a Belgian named Juliaan de Vriendt had gone bankrupt
with a panorama of the Crucifixion, and nothing but battle scenes had been
shown in German panoramas up to that time. Received opinion held that battles
were the only suitable subject for panoramas. When news of Piglhein’s subject
leaked out, the project met with criticism in advance. Once the picture went on
view, however, the general reception was enthusiastically positive. The
reviewer for the Kunstchronik wrote: “An artistic achievement of the first
order…. One can say without hesitation: ‘hats off!’ … The effect of the
unrolled painting is immense, shattering, and the whole is such a mature work
that one can joyfully conclude: Dry-as-dust impressionism has not yet carried
the day completely; not all artists have become reduced to mere copyists of
nature, whereby one must say that the copy is often a damned sight inferior to
the original handwriting.” Ludwig Trost wrote a detailed description of the
painting for the popular magazine Über Land und Meer:
When we first mounted the platform, which
should be imagined as a price of high ground adjacent to the hill of Calvary,
we were somewhat taken aback by the dimness in which we found ourselves. Our
eyes, accustomed to bright daylight, needed a monument or two to adjust to the
dimness – which corresponds to the solar eclipse that occurred during Christ’s
crucifixion – before the painting emerged, as if out of a fog. Slowly we began
to take in the peculiar atmosphere created by the lighting, which is dominated
by peculiarly cold tones such as the eye perceives when the sun goes behind a
cloud on a summer day, for instance. After a short while one grasps the
intended mood and realizes that it is exactly right.
If we dissect Piglhein’s work of art – for
such it is, in the noblest sense of the world – into its various components,
landscape, architecture, figures, and perspective, we find our expectations
have not only been met, but actually exceeded. Piglhein’s panorama of the
Crucifixion of Christ is a fully realized masterpiece, satisfying to the eye of
connoisseur and layman alike. All facile praise is silenced in the solemn
atmosphere of Good Friday surrounding us, and our hearts are deeply moved by
the sacred scene. I must repeat here that the finished work is the result of a
painstaking search for truth; every detail corresponds to the latest biblical
research as communicated to the artists by Professor Sattler in Munich. It
reproduces for our eyes that 7th of April of the year 29 with
overwhelming authenticity and monumental calm, that Friday on which the
population of Jerusalem streamed out of the city to see the historic event
depicted.
A reflection of this truth hovers about the
picture. There is no tree, no road, no hill, no wall or battlement that is
superfluous or out of the place; all is exactly as it should be. Those who come
expecting a lush green landscape or the splendors of King Solomon will perhaps
be disappointed, for what we see is a sterile region of parched vegetation and
bare rock, with a city that seems extraordinary eye to see the artistic appeal
of this landscape; the overall effect, achieved through the simplest of means,
beggars description, and while the pen may prepare the spectator for what he
will encounter, it can never convey the impression that is created by the
landscape, coloring, mood, and distant vistas of olive groves and sunny hills
and vales as yet untouched by the eclipse of the sun. The impression of reality
is increased, as in most panoramas, by the three-dimensional foreground, which
bridges the transition to the painted canvas with virtually perfect
verisimilitude. As soon as we stepped out on the platform we were taken in by
an optical illusion so perfect that it had to be called to our attention: the
painted ruins of an oriental mill are completed by actual blocks of stone that
extend up to the platform in such a manner that the eye absolutely cannot
distinguish the real pyramids of stone from the painted parts. There is no way
to make out the borderline, and one feels immediately transported into the
landscape….
Even Richard Muther, one of the leading lights of German art criticism at that time, had to admit that “Piglhein… has opened up new paths for panorama painting with his Crucifixion of Christ,” although Muther was otherwise convinced that “panoramas in general are not a field of particular interest.” In the Zeitschrift für bildende Kunst he devoted a long article to Piglhein, in which he concluded that the artist’s panorama
represents a triumph of modern realistic art. Only in the century of exact science, photography, and railroads did it become possible to make the comprehensive studies providing the scientific foundation of this great work. Only an artist who had pursued the most painstaking botanical, and archaeological research at the site could have treated this subject – depicted countless times in the history of Western art – in such a thoroughly new way. But his profound knowledge is everywhere paired with outstanding skill, great imagination, and the finest artistic sensibility…. One cannot help but feel that here one is truly in the presence of an artist by the grace of God.
Given such reactions by leading authorities, the public did not
disappoint the hopes of Halder and Co. The company’s investment proved to be
one of the most lucrative in the last quarter of the century.
At the exhibit, visitors could buy a guidebook, liberally sprinkled
with biblical quotations, by Professor Maximilian Sattler, in which it was suggested that the use of opera glasses
(available for a rental fee of twenty pfennigs) would greatly increase patrons’
appreciation of the artists’ skill. Various reproductions were also on sale,
suitable for every pocketbook, ranging from inexpensive postcards to a
luxurious set of twelve folio leaves in collotype.
The panorama remained on display in Munich from May 1886 to the
beginning of 1889; from there the exhibit moved to Berlin, where it remained
from April 1889 to the end of 1891. The next stop planned on its tour was
London, but this exhibit never took place, for reasons that will be explained
below. Instead the picture went to Vienna, where it was destroyed by fire
shortly after the opening.
A Copy of Piglhein’s Panorama in America and a
Battle in the Courts
Following the enormous success of Piglhein’s
panorama of jerusalem in Germany, several companies sent requests to the
artists to paint the picture a second time for rotundas in the United States.
In his contract with the firm of Halder and Hotop, however, Piglhein had agreed
not to produce a panorama on the same subject for ten years “neither acting for
himself nor on behalf of another person.” To ensure his compliance, Halder and
Hotop had also demanded that he hand over to them the india ink drawings and
glass plates that had been used to transfer the master sketch to the large
canvas. Piglhein was therefore obliged to decline such commissions. Instead
Karl Frosch went to America and painted a total of three panoramas of the
Crucifixion, one of which had been commissioned by the Buffalo Cyclorama
Company. Frosch himself repeated the architectural parts of the picture, while
two other German painters who had emigrated to the United States, Wilhelm Heine
and August Lohr, took over figures and the landscape. They later claimed that
this occurred with the full knowledge of the company must have got wind of the
project rather quickly, but they took no steps to try to stop it. Perhaps the
great distance made them confident that they would incur no financial loss
themselves. On the other hand a lawsuit might have had poor chances for
success, since Frosch had been engaged by Piglhein and had no contract with
Halder and Co. Furthermore no bilateral agreement existed between Germany and
the United States with regard to the Berne Convention of 1886 for the
protection of literary and artistic works.
As long as visitors continued streaming in to
see Piglhein’s original panorama, everyone was content. Trouble ensued only
when there was no longer any profit to be made the picture in Germany, and
Halder and Co. signed a contract with the British firm of Fishburn Brothers in
1890. With it Fishburn Brothers acquired the exclusive right to show the
Jerusalem panorama in Great Britain for several years beginning on January 1,
1892 – for a hefty fee, of course. The British company paid a further large sum
to lease a piece of land in London and began building a rotunda with all speed.
Their dismay can be imagined when December 1890, a panorama of the Crucifixion
opened in the Niagara Hall, very near their construction site, “painted by the
celebrated Munich painter Charles [sic] Frosch.” Following an intensive
advertising campaign it became an unprecedented succes, and soon between
fifteen hundred and two thousand people a day were paying a shilling each to
see the Buffalo Cyclorama Company’s version of Jerusalem.
Naturally Fishburn Brothers objected
strenuously and at once sued the Buffalo Cyclorama Company and its general
directior, John Hollingshead, demanding the immediate closing of their
exhibition. The American company responded by producing depositions from Karl
Frosch, who was in Holland at the time – another country that had not signed
the Berne Convention – working on still another copy of his Crucifixion for
exhibit in Amsterdam. Frosch stated that the original panorama had been painted
in equal parts by himself, Joseph Krieger, and “one Bruno Piglhein,” and that
he had entered into no contractural obligations. Furthermore he regarded
himself as solely responsible for the archaeological reconstruction of ancient
Jerusalem and the architectural elements of the painting, and he had reproduced
this and only this for the Buffalo company. Mr. Hollingshead went so far as to
claim that the two panoramas had nothing in common, a statement that was
quickly disproved by comparing photographs of the painting in the Niagara Hall
with drawings Piglhein sent from Munich. Apart from a few changes in the human
figures, the two pictures were virtually identical. Of course the Americans had
merely been playing for time, hoping to make as much money as possible before
the expected verdict against them. This tactic proved quite successful; by the
time the decision in favor of the Munich panorama company was handed down on
February 4, 1891, the Niagara Hall exhibit had made profit of almost five
thousand pounds.
In Germany, and especially in Munich, the
trial aroused great interest, and the newspapers covered it extensively.
Naturally the Buffalo company appealed the decision against them immediately,
but it was not possible to determine how the case was decided on appeal. In any
case if Bruno Piglhein’s panorama of Jerusalem ever came to London, it was only
for a very short time.
When the ornate rotunda in the Prater Park in
Vienna burned down, the panrama of Jerusalem was destroyed, and one might
assume that this was the end of the story. In fact, however, it was only the
beginning. Between 1884 and 1903, a total of at least thirteen or fourteen
panoramas of the Crucifixion were painted. The first, made sometime before 1886
by the Belgian Juliaan de Vriendt, was described above, It proved a financial
fiasco and soon disappeared from view. Number two was Piglhein’s panorama in
Munich; numbers three to five were produced in America by the team of Frosch,
Heine, and Lohr. (It was number three, painted for the Buffalo Cyclorama
Company, that led to the lawsuit in London. The Jerusalem Panorama Company in
New York City commissioned number four; number five went on exhibit in
Philadelphia in 1890.) When Frosch went to Holland to work on number six for Amsterdam, Heine and Lohr
accepted a commission to paint number seven for Milwaukee. Number eight would
be Paul Philippotaux’s surviving panorama in St. Anne de Beaupré, Québec. After
the fire in Vienna, Crucifixion panoramas were painted for the shrine of
Einsiedeln in Switzerland in 1893 (number nine) and for a rotunda in Stuttgart
in 1894 (number ten). These last two were the work of the experienced team of
Frosch and Krieger, with the aid of a third artist, the American William Robinson
Leigh (1866-1955). This group also collaborated once more, almost ten years
later, on number eleven, a 1903 panorama for Aachen.
Friedrich von Bötticher had
scathing words for these activities: “Through the disloyalty of Piglhein’s
assistant, the painter Karl Frosch, the panorama was reproduced nine times and
exhibited in several American cities, London, and Antwerp.” If Bötticher’s
assertion is correct, then more panoramas should be added to our list (number
twelve to fifteen). No further information could be obtained on them, however.
The last known Crucifixion panorama was painted for the Bavarian shrine of
Altötting. Here the painter in charge was gebhard Fugel, but Josef Krieger,
another of Piglhein’s original collaborators, was part of the team.
Ever since the accusations of
plagiarism had been raised in the London trial, the painters assiduously varied
their depictions – as far as the subject matter and the topography of Jerusalem
allowed. Of all versions dating from this period, only the two painted for
shrines have survived to the present day.
The panorama painted in 1903
for the shrine of Altötting in eastern Bavaria is almost certainly the last
variant of Piglhein’s panorama of the Crucifixion. The idea for the picture
came from Gebhard Fugel (1863-1939), who also supervised its execution. Fugel
opposed the overly sweet and sentimental style of the religious art of his day
with a “vigorous realism” that led to his being called the “renewer of
Christian art” in Germany. He was not only the driving force behind the
painting of the Altötting panorama, but also assumed all the production costs;
an unspecified group of “friends” financed construction of the rotunda. The
painting itself, which is still in place, is 39 feet high and almost 309 feet
in circumference; the rotunda has a diameter of 97 feet.
Fugel himself painted the
human figures; as collaborators he engaged two Munich artists, Karl Nadler and
Josef Krieger. The latter was already a veteran of several Crucifixion
panoramas. Yet another archaeological
reconstruction of ancient Jerusalem was provided by H. Ellenberger, an art
teacher from Würzburg. Nadler and Krieger, who were responsible for the
architectural elements and landscape, respectively, first undertook a short
study trip to the Holy Land; on their return the group set to work on the
actual painting, which must have been done in one of the still existing Munich
panorama workshops. Their insistence on exact realism made progress slow and
must occasionally have led to slightly macabre scenes; according to one
account, the artists set up real wooden crosses in their studio and “fastened”
models to them, in order to be able to paint from life.
When the panorama opened to
the public in 1903, the reaction was mixed. Some found that “it encourages
pilgrims in their devotions, as well as providing a high level of artistic
enjoyment”; others found it an offense against both art and religion when the
guide stops at a certain point in the tour and points out “a stone staircase
that demonstrates with what marvelous skill the artists have been able to blur
the line between painting and reality.” The Bavarian government has declared
the panorama in Altötting a historic monument, and today the guide has been
replaced by a crackling loudspeaker. The taped explanation still includes a
reference to the staircase, and a mute old woman keeps watch to see that it is
not damaged by the curious.
Of all the subjects treated
in panoramas, the Crucifixion was no doubt the most sensitive and the most questionable. The Crucifixion
itself was always depicted in the traditional manner familiar from thousands of
easel paintings, creating an awkward contrast to the rest of the panorama
surrounding it. It is difficult not to feel that the striking realism of the
depiction and the alleged historical accuracy were meant to present an article
of religious belief to visitors as realty. There is a false note in the whole
that cannot be ignored. This is particularly true of the Altötting picture;
perhaps it is caused by the general tenor of the shrine itself. Certainly of
all surviving panoramas this is the stalest and most dated. The printed
brochure available at the ticket office proclaims that the darkened corridor
leading to the observation platform represents “the way to ‘another world’.”
Panoramas in Vienna: The
Second Phase
The last painting exhibited
at the New Panorama was Piglhein’s Jerusalem with the Crucifixion of Christ.
Piglhein’s panorama arrived in Vienna from London and had been on display
barely two months when fire broke out in the rotunda in the night of April
26-27, 1892. The fire department arrived and pumped enough water into the
building to bring the fire under control, and the cast-iron frame sustained
little damage, but between the fire and the water the painting was a total
loss. Various hypotheses were advanced about what caused the fire – a careless
cigarette smoker, spontaneous combustion in a storeroom, the gas lights, arson
– and finally officials decided defective electrical wiring had been at fault.
Both Piglhein, the artist, and Ignaz Fleischer, the owner of the New Panorama,
turned out to be well insured.
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