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Jean
Charles Langlois 1789-1870. Le Spectacle de l'histoire
Musée des Beaux-Arts, Caen (July 9-October 17, 2005)
Jean Charles Langlois 1789-1870. Le Spectacle de l'histoire,
Exhibition catalogue
François Robichon, et. al.
Paris/Caen: Somogy/Musée des Beaux-Arts de Caen, 2005
190 pp; color illustrations and bibliography
40 €
ISBN 2-85056-8984-5 |
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Fragments of a Dream (History)1 |
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This monographic
exhibition devoted to Jean Charles Langlois, a relatively unknown
nineteenth-century French painter and panoramist, is not a typical
ramble through the career development of an artist whose place in
the history of art is secure (fig.1). Rather, it is an exceptional
exploration of an artist who saw himself as both a painter and an
author of history. Prefiguring a master such as filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein,
Langlois' goal was no less than to visualize contemporary history.
Colonel Langlois, as he was most commonly known, represented, in the
grandest form available to him, the epic events of his lifetimefrom
the battles of Napoleon in Egypt and Moscow, to those of his nephew,
Napoleon III, in Crimea and at Solferino. Langlois's achievement was
to take a dying form of popular entertainment and turn it into a new
means for projecting French military history. The descendents of this
cultural form continue to flourish today, in cinemas, IMAX theaters,
and videogames. |
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As Walter Benjamin wrote, panorama
rotundas were the dream houses of French society in the nineteenth
century, and his fragmentary historical study, The Arcades Project
(Das Passagen-Werk), can serve as a model with which to examine
this recent exhibition.2 For this show was also multifaceted,
constructed of shards of history that provide meaning in a surprising
and sometimes revelatory way. If we seek to comprehend the history
of nineteenth-century France more fully, we ought to look more carefully
at the images it projected. While numerous art historians have debated
the political significance of avant-garde painting, far fewer have
taken on popular culture as forms in themselves. The literary historian,
Maurice Samuels, has recently written on the topic of French panoramas
and their place in the history of mid-nineteenth-century France. "Offering
up images of the nation's history in a public form in as visually
realistic manner as possible, historical spectacles such as the panorama
provided perspectives through which new individual and national identities
could take shape through the consumption of a version of the past.
To trace this process is to witness the formation of one of modernity's
founding illusions."3 |
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To investigate the career of Jean-Charles
Langlois naturally leads to an analysis of the illusions he produced;
what was particularly illuminating about this exhibition was that
the viewer was able to perceive the traces of the production of these
illusions. Langlois's version of history is recreated through significant,
mostly visual, elements. The production of history, whether through
textual or visual means, requires a selective scrutiny of materials
that always yields partial results. What is remarkable about panoramas
is that they provided a complete illusion of reality, considered in
their day to be truer than texts derived from citations and direct
observation.4 Looking at Langlois's panoramas now is impossible.
These grand objects have not survived history and the glorious wholes
they once presented for public enlightenment and entertainment are
now in ruins. Though many of the panorama canvases were reused to
produce new panoramas, a few of them made wide-ranging tours and ended
up who knows where. Unlike works of art, these objects were made as
entertainment, and therefore lost their value as soon as the audience
was no longer interested. All that is left are fragments, shreds of
evidence, and traces of once-glorious edifices; this exhibition is
composed of studies, maquettes, and photographs. Trying to piece Langlois's
career together is like trying to relive a dream through a handful
of remembered images. There are glimpses of brilliance that make one
wonder, and delight, in their power to convey poignancy, but this
history of the nineteenth century comes together like fragments of
a dream. |
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Which makes it a truly honest, and
exceptional, exhibition, without a doubt more meaningful than most.
What are the fragments and what do they tell us? An introductory section,
leading down a wide hallway, introduces Langlois as a historical figure
with great ambitions, good credentials (actual letters from Girodet
and Horace Vernet), and sustained regional connections. After training
at the École polytechnique, Langlois became an officer/artist
in the Grand Armée, eventually taking to the battlefield with
Napoléon. During the Restoration, he again studied art, producing
military portraits and history paintings for the Salon, and then engaged
in a brief career as an illustrator for a military and picturesque
history of Spain. In other words, he lived a widely varied life as
a war hero (injured at Waterloo, aide-de-camp for général
Petit) and an artist (Salon painter, illustrator) before finally turning
his hand to what would become his lifelong passion, the creation of
military panoramas. |
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The first of these was launched in
1827 and featured the naval battle of Navarino, a French victory over
Turkish forces during the Greek War of Independence that occurred
only a few years before. It was Langlois's brilliance to reinvent
the panorama that, since Daguerre's invention of the diorama in 1822,
had fallen into decline. His central innovation was to feature an
event in the panorama, rather than merely to represent a place, as
earlier panoramas had done ("to see history in the making"
as François Robichon puts it, p.60). He added further interest,
and a sense of reality, by reconstructing a portion of the one of
the ships that took part in the battle, the Scipion, and installing
it as the platform in the center of the panorama rotunda. The panorama
rotunda was designed to accentuate the action of the scene, and to
make the viewer feel a part of this historical battle. Though the
rotunda is lost, it is not difficult to appreciate the audacity of
representing contemporary history in this spectacular form, offering
the illusion of living through an historical event. The outlandish
premise worked and Langlois's panorama was a tremendous success, launching
a career that the exhibition traces through the paintings, studies
and photographs that Langlois made to prepare his panoramas. In addition,
there were the actual descriptive booklets that viewers received,
as well as a series of photographs featuring several of the panoramas
themselves. |
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Thus prepared by the introduction,
the visitor turns to see what is unquestionably the most impressive
single work in the exhibition (fig. 2), a set of twenty-three large-scale
pencil drawings, made with a camera obscura, and overlaid with
watercolor, that combine to produce a panoramic image of The Siege
of Algiers, the subject of Langlois's second panorama (1833).
These images have been brought together for the first time from two
separate collections, and more than anything else in the exhibition,
provide a sense of the scale of a panoramic image, even though they
are placed on a large flat wall. These are beautiful drawings individually,
but when they are all seen together they provide a surprising sense
of what the panorama must have been like for viewers of individual
works of art. The whole is indeed greater than the sum of its parts,
and the sense of an entire visual experience, as opposed to a discreet
aesthetic one, is palpable. |
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Caroline Joubert, the curator at the
Musée des Beaux-Arts responsible for the exhibition, placed
a group of very impressive, small painted studies of Algiers from
the museum's collection around the perimeter of this room. In these
studies, a visitor could see that Langlois was interested in more
than the geographical location as the focus of a panoramic view. Indeed,
Langlois accompanied the expeditionary force that conquered the citythe
purported subject of this panoramaand then returned in 1832
to make further studies. In the process, he produced over sixty small
paintings on paper (now mounted on canvas) featuring various views
of Algiers and its surroundings as well as drawings in pencil and
charcoal. A judicious selection of seventeen paintings and seven drawings
is hung in the room with the panorama studies, and brings to light
Langlois's deep interest in the places he represented. The exhibition
demonstrates how this practice persisted in Langlois career, even
after he began making photographic studies instead of drawings. Never
content to merely find the view and record the essentials, Langlois
studied his locales in far greater depth than a panoramawhich
can only provide a single point of viewcould represent. |
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Next Langlois moved to Moscow as an
aide-de-camp for maréchal Maison. Combining his dual
professions as officer and artist more than ever, he made panorama
studies in the surrounding countryside that allowed him to provide
secret information to the French government! His years in Russia (1834-39)
may or may not have yielded any useful espionage, but he apparently
got on royally with the Czar, and he managed to produce two panoramas
in Paris featuring Napoleon's disastrous adventure there; the Panorama
of the Battle of Moscow (1835), and the Panorama of the Fire
of Moscow (1839). The former is represented in the exhibition
by a seven-meter canvas depicting the military invasion, and the latter
through four long canvases as well as some studies of Moscow achieved
in the same manner as the studies for the Panorama of Siege of
Algiers. One interesting comparative work in this section of the
exhibition is Langlois's history painting, The Fire of Smolensk,
submitted to the Salon of 1838. It is a dramatic and powerful image
and serves to remind the viewer that Langlois did not just engage
in popular entertainment, but also positioned himself as an artist
in his own right. This demonstrates not only that these activities
overlap, but that the panoramas emerged sometimes from the crucible
of the Salon. |
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The next room is devoted to the Panorama
of the Battle of Eylau (1843) and the Panorama of the Battle
of the Pyramides (1851)both returning again to the Napoleonic
period. The area devoted to this Egyptian sojourn and panorama project
is one of the most spectacular (fig. 3). Here again, history painting
is mixed with small studies done on site and larger panels prefiguring
the panorama. There are also some photographs that belonged to Langlois,
but were in fact taken by Félix Teynard and Maxime Du Camp.
It was the chance encounter in Egypt between Monsieur and Madame Langlois
and Du Camp and Gustave Flaubert, which opened Langlois's eyes to
the possibilities of photographing sites and using the images for
later compositions. |
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At this point, the exhibition is interrupted
by a room that contains a fragment of the Panorama of the Battle
of the Pyramids, taken from Langlois's maquettes (fig. 4). The
rotunda and platform, built on a grand scale but in cramped quarters,
are presented without explanation (figs. 5 and 6). Perhaps it does
not need any, for don't we all want to see what a panorama looked
and felt like? Nevertheless, I sensed a postmodern clash of historical
epochs was being introduced into the exhibition. The painting on the
walls had a slick appearance and the rough slabs of wood that composed
the platform and viewing deck were in clear contrast. Because the
panorama section was wedged into the exhibition, the panoramic image
was entirely too close. Descending, I felt that I had missed something
but, at a distance, I think I get the joke. The exhibition is composed
of historical fragments, so why not add an architectural fragment
at the center of the exhibition. The intention was perhaps to draw
the viewer in, to make him or her feel a part of the action, rather
than seeing it at a distance. In this room, the practical impossibilities
of historical reconstruction were made clear. Since Langlois made
panorama rotundas larger and narrower, his works would actually have
separated viewers from the image, but no museum I know of could have
fit such a panorama in their exhibition halls. Ironically, the architectural
frame, Langlois's last panorama rotunda designed by Gabriel Davioud
and built on the Champs-Elysées, is the one real historical
object that survives of the panoramas themselves. |
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It was this rotunda where Langlois's last two
panoramas, the Siege of Sebastopol and the Battle of Solferino,
were staged. As François Robichon and André Rouillé
have previously shown, these panoramas were composed with the aid
of photography, and served the very specific purpose of glorifying
the recent military episodes of the Second Empire under the sponsorship
of Napoléon III's administration.5 In terms of both
artistic process and narrative intent, these works are more modern
than the rest. In Luc Demarquest's contribution to the catalogue on
the subject of Langlois and photography, the reader learns about his
photographic beginnings in Crimea and his brief professional partnership
with Luc Méhédin. Langlois seems to have learned fast
and began taking pictures on his own, wandering the area and collecting
views in the way that he previously did with sketches. The photographs
that Langlois used to prepare the Panorama of Siege of Sebastopol,
from the Crimean War of 1855-56, demonstrate that he selected a location
that was historically specific rather than picturesque. The landscape
appears ravaged by war, with a wide view of the area surrounding the
battle, but focusing just upon the piecemeal ramparts. In one photograph
of the panorama itself, it is clear that the central historical figures
were the focus of this spectacle and their actions, as in contemporary
battle paintings, were the raison d'être of this art
form. |
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On the level of material and experimentation,
the last room is the most interesting. Langlois's trip to Solferino
in northern Italy, the location of another recent battle involving
the French army, was his last. His photographs of the area allowed
him to select the proper prospect for the panorama and, in one exceptional
case, he even went so far as to paint on photographic prints, he literally
transmogrified a reflection of the world into an image of the past
(fig. 7). There are actually two sets of panoramic photographs on
view here, one of which (the view from Mount Alto) is reconstituted
as a set of two three-meter-long maquettes (paintings). This view
would eventually become the Panorama of the Battle of Solferino
(1865), represented in the exhibition by a panorama of photographs
taken by Paul Marcellin Berthier. Some of Langlois's photographs are
squared for transfer and thus, the process of transfer from photo
to painting is quite visible. There are also other related images
including an undated history painting by Langlois, Mac-Mahon à
Solferino, which provides a fascinating point of contrast. This
rich myriad of works was astutely installed to provide a dense historical
palimpsest, a group of images in a variety of media that demonstrate
not only the distinctions between media, but the kind of provocative
confusion caused by a profusion of them. References fly from one image
to the next, and the creative process has rarely been so convincingly
evoked even if the final product is no longer available. In fact,
the very lack of the panorama makes the object itself appear far more
complex, the result of a series of pictorial choices combined with
the necessary political quotations that transform image into history
as a form of propaganda. Without the ideological product, one perceives
better the mechanism that brings such dream images to light. In this
last section of the exhibition, the sum of the parts is greater than
the whole. |
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Needless to say, the catalogue cannot
match the panoramic spectacle of the exhibition; it stands as a trace
of the visual experience of the exhibition just as the photographs
and studies are traces of the panoramas themselves. It is incomplete,
yet more informative, full of not only contemporary writing and illustrations,
but also quotations from period material such as the brochures that
accompanied the panoramas, and letters from Langlois. The first point
is that the catalogue is literally incompletenot all of the
images from the exhibition could fit in it, despite its elongated
format and not insignificant heft. There are simply too many pieces
of visual material and they are too horizontal, so the authors have
wisely opted for an informed and richly reproduced book rather than
producing a copy of every image in smaller format. Of course, there
are losses, even historical ones, but no one could be more aware of
such concerns than these authors. François Robichon, the most
knowledgeable scholar on French panoramas and Langlois in particular,
lucidly elaborates the rich historical context of Langlois's productions
without really providing an endorsement of his works. He does an admirable
job bringing Langlois and his panoramas to life, but one also senses
his great passion is the panoramas themselves and their effect. This
focus leads to a more nuanced approach to the career of an artist
who was, beyond doubt, a success, but who nevertheless has not come
down to us as a significant cultural figure. While Langlois's production
was prolific and complex, the images and pieces of information presented
in the catalogue do not, cannot, reconstitute the lost panoramas,
so Robichon's descriptive achievements, based on historical writings,
sketches and other remnants, are all the more important to gleaning
a sense of the whole. |
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Luc Demmarquest's essay "Colonel
Langlois and Photography" is a systematic treatment of the images
in the show that takes on a topic already partially explored by Robichon
and Rouillé, but his focus is broader, exploring other photography
made by Langlois; and concluding that his pictorial interests were
at times picturesque, but finally went beyond such goals when he was
compelled to record even the most banal subjects, such as stones and
walls. He perceives in Langlois's relationship to photography a "hybridity
of meansin which painting, photography and reality intertwinethat
is a premonition of our contemporary artistic sensibility" (p.
32). Whether or not he is correct about contemporary sensibility,
Demarquest is right to point to the complexity of the photograph's
relationship to painting in this era and, in fact, Langlois's multivalent
pictorial production demonstrates that, while painting and photography
are definitely linked in the nineteenth century, their relationship
is by no means direct or one-sided. |
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I am tempted to ask if this show serves
finally as an art or history exhibition. As art exhibition, it is
well installed and visually rich, if not always satisfying, and as
history exhibition, it provides a slice of the nineteenth century
that could not be more multi-faceted. Langlois's career crossed borders
(officer, artist, entrepreneur) and informs us about history in a
way few other individual figures could, but his art is the subject
of this exhibition, not his century. What is more, his most significant
productions are now all lost. It seems like an exhibition idea with
limited potential, but museums can offer surprises. Le Spectacle
de l'Histoire does not provide a career view of a masterful painter,
or photographer, but it does bring fascinating, brilliant works to
light. In a move that redefines the relation of art to history, it
provides a sense of the past that unfolded though images. The pictures
in this exhibition reference the modern profusion of spectacular forms
of entertainment, the aspirations of military commanders, and the
relations between a new class of bourgeois viewers and the world they
came to comprehend through visual sensations. It is a history of the
nineteenth century evoked through images, fragments that communicate
long forgotten dreams to the authors of the future. |
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John Zarobell
Philadelphia Museum of Art jzarobell@philamuseum.org |
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1. I owe great thanks to Caroline Joubert for her reading of my
manuscript and help assembling materials for this review and to
Janet Whitmore for her editorial suggestions. All translations are
mine.
2. Walter Benjamin, The Arcades Project, tr. Howard Eiland
and Kevin McLaughlin (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap/Harvard, 1999),
pp. 527-536.
3. Maurice Samuels, The Spectacular Past. Popular History and
the Novel in Nineteenth-Century France (Ithaca and London: Cornell
University Press, 2004), p. 19.
4. See François Robichon, "Les Panoramas en France
au XIXe siècle." 3 vols. Thèse de troisième
cycle, Université de Paris X, Nanterre, 1982 and John Zarobell,
"Jean-Charles Langlois' Panorama of Algiers (1833) and
the Prospective Colonial Landscape," Art History, vol.
5, no. 26 (November 2003), pp. 639-668.
5. F. Robichon and A. Rouillé, Jean-Charles Langlois.
La photographie, la peinture, la guerre. Correspondance inedited
du Crimée (1855-1856) (Nîmes: éd Jacqueline
Chambon,1992).
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© 20056 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and John Zarobell. All Rights Reserved. |
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