The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

A whale’s tale: Longest painting in North America restored

- Photos and text from wire services

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. — A museum has restored the longest painting in North America so it can share the story of American whaling with the public.

The quarter-mile-long panorama toured the U.S. after it was completed in 1848. A section was featured at the 1964 New York World’s Fair.

But the panorama deteriorat­ed after so much traveling on wagons and trains, rolling and unrolling. Paint dried up and flaked off, and the panorama was put into storage.

The New Bedford Whaling Museum enlisted the help of a textile conservato­r to fix the “Grand Panorama of a Whaling Voyage Round the World.” Now it’s searching for a large venue to display it, scouting locations in New Bedford but open to considerin­g Providence, Rhode Island, or the Mystic Seaport in Connecticu­t.

D. Jordan Berson, who’s managing the project, said he hopes this record of American whaling can eventually return to some of the cities that were stops on the national tour, including Boston; Buffalo, New York; and St. Louis.

“It’s a national treasure that’s been out of the spotlight for too long,” he said.

Benjamin Russell and Caleb Purrington created the panorama to capture all aspects of a whaling voyage. The panorama would be mounted on a system of cranks and reels to go across a theater stage as a narrator told stories of hunting whales and processing their carcasses. A poster for the Boston stop in 1849 advertises tickets for 25 cents.

The audience members would hear what it was like to round Cape Horn and visit Fiji and other far-flung destinatio­ns as they saw painted scenes of those locations. Most people hadn’t traveled to any of those places, and photograph­y was in its infancy.

Many young men at that time were headed west in search of gold, which meant they weren’t joining whaling crews, said Michael Dyer, the museum’s curator of maritime history. The panorama may have been used as a recruiting tool, he said.

The museum has spent $400,000 to conserve, digitize and store the panorama. The money was raised from individual donors, private foundation­s and government grants.

The panorama is about 1,300 feet long and 8 feet tall. The museum’s chief curator, Christina Connett, said she’s confident it’s the longest painting in North America and she knows of no longer moving panorama in the world.

 ?? Steven Senne / Associated Press ?? Photo textile conservato­r Kate Tarleton works to restore a portion of the 1848, “Grand Panorama of a Whaling Voyage Round the World,” at the New Bedford Whaling Museum, in New Bedford, Mass.
Steven Senne / Associated Press Photo textile conservato­r Kate Tarleton works to restore a portion of the 1848, “Grand Panorama of a Whaling Voyage Round the World,” at the New Bedford Whaling Museum, in New Bedford, Mass.
 ??  ?? D. Jordan Berson, director of collection­s at the New Bedford Whaling Museum, stands next to a portion of the 1848, “Grand Panorama of a Whaling Voyage Round the World.”
D. Jordan Berson, director of collection­s at the New Bedford Whaling Museum, stands next to a portion of the 1848, “Grand Panorama of a Whaling Voyage Round the World.”

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