Atlanta Cyclorama
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The Atlanta Cyclorama is a circular panoramic painting of the Battle of Atlanta. The cyclorama is housed in a museum, also called the "Atlanta Cyclorama" in Grant Park in Atlanta, Georgia. Visitors view the cylindrical painting from the inside, entering through an entrance in the floor. If unrolled, the painting would measure 42 feet high by 358 feet long and is the largest oil painting in the world.
The painting depicts fierce fighting during the American Civil War as Confederate defenders of Atlanta unsuccessfully counterattacked the invading United States army on July 22, 1864. The painting was commissioned after the end of the war as part of the political campaign of Vice Presidential candidate John A. Logan, who had commanded a large part of the Union forces in the battle. Thus, parts of the painting emphasize the heroism of Logan and other Union commanders.
It was created in Milwaukee by a team led by Germans F.W. Heine and August Lohr. They also consulted Civil War artist and witness Theodore Davis, whom they painted into the work. It opened to display in Detroit in 1887.
The painting was sold and ended up in the hands of a traveling circus. When this circus came to Atlanta in the late 1800s, few Atlantans wished to see a Northern-biased painting that glorified the defeat that would lead to the destruction of their city. So, with little attendance, the circus went bankrupt, selling its assets including the painting and the animals. The animals became the founding attraction at Zoo Atlanta and the painting was housed in a wooden structure next to the zoo.
Today, the cyclorama still resides next to the zoo, but now in a state-of-the art facility designed to protect and conserve the delicate painting. The museum displays pictures and artifacts from the Civil War, including the Texas a steam locomotive that pursued the captured train the General in the Great Locomotive Chase during the war. This raid was depicted in the Buster Keaton film The General. A movie theater inside the museum shows a short film about the Atlanta Campaign narrarated by James Earl Jones to vistors before they view the painting. The cyclorama painting itself is augmented by a three-dimensional diorama in front of the painting and a narration of the events of the battle and the history of the painting. A popular story concerning the diorama involves actor Clark Gable. During the celebrations surrounding the opening of the film Gone with the Wind, the film's actors visited the Atlanta Cyclorama. Gable allegedly claimed that the only way the painting could be any more magnificent was if he was in it, prompting the management to add Gable's features to one of the sculptures in the diorama, that of a dying soldier.
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