Contents
Memory of the World
Corona Variations
The Cathedral of Monet
Panorama of Congo
Painted Panoramas Recognition by Unesco Programme Memory of the World (project 2023 – 2026)
Daniel JaquetThe IPC pursues the valorization of the painted panorama’s heritage as part of its mission and purpose The organization regroups heritage panorama owners or custodians worldwide and therefore is entitled to apply for the recognition of the panoramas as a documentary heritage by the UNESCO programme Memory of the World.
The MoW Programme was established in 1992 with the aim of facilitating the preservation of the world’s past, present and future documentary heritage, assisting universal access to documentary heritage, and increasing awareness worldwide of the existence and significance of documentary heritage and thereby foster dialogue and mutual understanding between people and cultures.
The application preparation is a bottom-up process which takes time, commitment, and resources. A project for the application has been presented at the IPC General Assembly in 2023, which named a commission to steer the project.
2023 | Presentation of the project
2024 | IPC member and non-member survey
2024 | IPC conference with scientific exchange on the topic
2024 | Constitution of national groups based on eligibility criteria
2025 | Preparation of national applications
2026 | Submission of the application
The operational committee of this IPC commission is composed by Prof. Sarah Kenderdine (Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL), Dominique Hanson (IPC Treasurer, former Director of the Army Museum of Brussels), and Dr. Daniel Jaquet (Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL and Council member of the Foundation for the Panorama of the Battle of Murten).
Updates based on the annual reports presented at the IPC General Assemblies will be published on this page (next: October 2024).
Sanford Wurmfeld’s Corona Variations
Suzanne Wray
I recently attended the Artists Reception for Sanford Wurmfeld’s Corona Variations at the David Richard Gallery in New York. This solo exhibition presented 25 canvases conceived and painted during the pandemic from 2020 to 2023.
The current exhibition consists of works using the grids and color variations for which the artist is known, with this new series dividing the composition into halves, vertically or horizontally. The way in which squares of color are placed draws the eye of the viewer along, almost giving the illusion that the painting’s surface is in motion.
The gallery’s press release describes the largest of these new works as a “panoramic full spectrum centerpiece...measuring 72 x 144 inches.” Although described as “panoramic,” it is not a circular painting. But Wurmfeld has painted circular and elliptical “cycloramas” in the past. The catalog for his Cyclorama 2000 at the Talbot Rice Gallery at the University of Edinburgh in 2004 contains an essay in which
Wurmfeld describes the inspiration for his first abstract panorama: a visit to the Panorama Mesdag in The Hague.
I experienced the artist’s E-Cyclorama years ago: an amazing experience, for the spectator is surrounded by color, with some rows appearing to rotate quickly, others more slowly.
At the reception, I was able to speak to Sandy for a few moments, reminding him of my name and IPC membership, and conveying the greetings of Gabriele Koller as well, who wished that she could have been present.
Sandy told me that he has drawn up plans for another cyclorama that he hopes to paint; it would be his fourth such work. Hopefully we will hear more of this in a future issue of the IPC newsletter.
For information on the current exhibition, Corona Variations, Images of Wurmfeld’s cycloramas can be seen at https://www. sanfordwurmfeld.com.
A Tribute to the Impressionism: New Panorama
The Cathedral of Monet by Yadegar Asisi Opens at the Panometer Leipzig
Sebastian OswaldGerman premiere for Yadegar Asisi’s panorama The Cathedral Of Monet — Freedom of Painting: With this work, Yadegar Asisi has created a 360 degree painting of colour and light in the style of Impressionism. He thus dedicates himself to one of the most important art epochs of our time and provides an insight into his own 30 - year period of painterly creativity. The panorama has been on display at the Panometer in Leipzig since March 16, 2024.
Yadegar Asisi is breaking new artistic ground: for the first time, a panorama has been painted entirely in oil on canvas before being digitally enlarged and printed on fabric. The work, which was then staged on a 3,500 square metre scale, takes us back to the end of the 19th century in the northern French city of Rouen. From several levels of the 15-metre-high visitor tower, visitors are immersed in an experience of vivid brushstrokes and a unique interplay of colour and light.
The scenery opens up as if you were standing on Rouen’s cathedral square in 1894: the evening sun almost completely illuminates the façade of Notre – Dame de Rouen Cathedral in the center, casting a warm orange – red light on the forecourt and the houses already in the shade. A multifaceted interplay of extraordinary colour nuances, shades and incidences of light pervades the entire surroundings. Asisi immortalises famous painters and contemporaries such as Vincent van Gogh, Auguste Renoir and Claude Monet on the forecourt of the cathedral.
The starting point for the work is a 6 × 2 metre canvas on which Yadegar Asisi has painterly reconstructed the cathedral with its surrounding square and houses. The basis was a famous series of paintings by Claude Monet from 1892 – 1894, who captured the cathedral in Rouen several times under a wide variety of lighting conditions. The mood of the complex lighting situations inspired Asisi to depict this place and the most important players in the art world of the time.
Panoramas by Yadegar Asisi have been on display in the historic gasometer since 2003. This is where the renaissance of panoramas began. In addition to Leipzig, the artist’s panoramas can also be seen in Berlin, Dresden, Lutherstadt Wittenberg and Pforzheim. Further locations in Vienna and Constance are planned.
Yadegar Asisi was born in Vienna in 1955, studied architecture at the Technical University of Dresden and painting at the Hochschule der Künste in Berlin, where he graduated as a master student of Klaus Fußmann. Since 2003, the Berlin artist has been creating monumental 360° panoramas measuring up to 3,500 square metres in circular buildings the height of a house. In addition to his own buildings in Leipzig and Berlin, the artist’s panoramas are also shown at other partner locations in Dresden, Pforzheim and Lutherstadt Wittenberg. Yadegar Asisi is particularly interested in inaccessible natural spaces, city views with their insights into structures and societies as well as moments in contemporary history. With the help of his team of architects and digital artists for 3D and image processing, Asisi creates his panoramic works in years of detailed work as high-resolution digital paintings, which are created from thousands and thousands of photographs, drawings, sketches and paintings. During photo shoots with extras, scene images are created which Asisi incorporates into his panoramic work. The panorama is then printed on over 30 metres of fabric and installed in the panorama buildings.
In the accompanying exhibition with numerous works by Asisi, the artist explores the tension between painting, craftsmanship and digitalisation, but above all his experience of the senses and the world. He reflects on the interplay between art and technology in the context of social progress: just as Impressionism marked the beginning of an era that Asisi describes as the “liberation of painting”, developments today are leading to the “freedom of painting”. The completely free development of motifs, themes, painting techniques and
technologies such as artificial intelligence are expanding the spectrum and expressive possibilities of visual artists right up to the present day.
The first digital collection by Yadegar Asisi, which is dedicated to the pioneers of modern painting, will also be published as part of the exhibition. To mark the 150th anniversary of the first Impressionist exhibition, seven artists from this era will be immortalised as NFTs in the form of six digital works based on the original painting by Yadegar Asisi.