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(Part of the panorama painting-picture1)

(Part of the panorama painting-picture2)

(Part of the panorama painting -Tadeusz Kościuszko-picture3)
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The
idea came from the painter Jan Styka (1858 – 1925)
in Lwów (Lvov) who invited the renown battle-painter
Wojciech Kossak (1857 – 1942) to participate in
the project. They were assisted by Ludwik Boller,
Tadeusz Popiel, Zygmunt Rozwadowski, Teodor Axentowicz,
Włodzimierz Tetmajer, Wincenty Wodzinowski and Michał
Sozański.
The project was conceived as a patriotic manifestation
commemorating the 100th anniversary of the
victorious Battle of Racławice, a famous episode of the
Kościuszko Insurrection, a heroic but in the end fallen
attempt to defend Polish independence. The battle was
fought on 4 April 1794 between the insurrectionist force
of regulars and peasant volunteers (awesome
scythe-bearers) under Kościuszko (1746 – 1817)
himself and the Russian army commanded by General
Tormasov. For the nation which had lost its
independence, the memory of this glorious victory was
particularly important.
The National Exhibition, organized in Lwów in 1894,
offered an excellant opportunity to realize
Styka’s idea. Canvas, woven to order, was bought
in Brussels, the specially-built rotunda’s iron
structure (designed by Ludwik Ramułt) in Vienna.
The rotunda, located in Stryjski Park in
Lwów, was ready in July 1893. The huge panorama
painting was executed within 9 months,
between August 1893 and May 1894. The official opening
was on 5 June 1894. Since the very beginning, Panorama
of the Battle of Racławice attracted enormous
attention and brought crowds of tourists to Lwów.
After World War II, the painting was brought to Wrocław
along with a part of the collection of the Ossoliński
Institution. As under the Communist regime the
subject was considered politically sensitive, the
efforts to have the canvas restored and exhibited,
undertaken by successive Volunteer Committees, were
successful only after August 1980. Reopened on 14 June
1985, the major attraction
of the old Lwów has immediately become the main tourist
attraction of Wrocław. Here, contemporary viewers have
an opportunity to participate in a unique illusionist
spectacle. Among many guests visiting the
panorama were Pope John Paul II, Beatrix, the Queen of
Holland, Czesław
Miłosz, winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize for Literature.
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