Skip to main content

The Diorama Effect: Gas, Politics, and Opera in the 1825 Paris Diorama

Publication ,  Journal Article
Bowen, D
Published in: Intermedialites / Intermediality
2014

The diorama on the rue Sanson in Paris (1822–39) created a blended image by rotating the auditorium between two tableaux, each painted back and front and illuminated with colored light to create a sense of animation. What I call the “diorama effect” is the way the diorama used projection and reflection—both literally and figuratively—to create the illusion of places and characters known to the audience while simultaneously dissolving these references, seemingly into thin air. The 1825 diorama, the example in this essay, featured a tableau by Charles-Marie Bouton depicting a view of Paris and its new gas meter, and a second tableau by Louis Daguerre presenting a colonnade that disappears. To understand the way that these tableaux participated in then-contemporary debates on gaslight each is read in relation to narratives from the time—notably, the program notes for the diorama, the popular fairy tale of Aladdin and the magic lamp, and public debates in which the gas lamp figures as a political symbol of insurrection or, conversely, as a romantic symbol of exoticism.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Intermedialites / Intermediality

DOI

EISSN

1920-3136

ISSN

1705-8546

Publication Date

2014

Volume

special issue: projeter / projection

Issue

24-25

Related Subject Headings

  • 1901 Art Theory and Criticism
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Bowen, D. (2014). The Diorama Effect: Gas, Politics, and Opera in the 1825 Paris Diorama. Intermedialites / Intermediality, special issue: projeter / projection(24–25). https://doi.org/10.7202/1034155ar
Bowen, Dore. “The Diorama Effect: Gas, Politics, and Opera in the 1825 Paris Diorama.” Edited by Larisa Dryansky and Erika Wicky. Intermedialites / Intermediality special issue: projeter / projection, no. 24–25 (2014). https://doi.org/10.7202/1034155ar.
Bowen D. The Diorama Effect: Gas, Politics, and Opera in the 1825 Paris Diorama. Dryansky L, Wicky E, editors. Intermedialites / Intermediality. 2014;special issue: projeter / projection(24–25).
Bowen, Dore. “The Diorama Effect: Gas, Politics, and Opera in the 1825 Paris Diorama.” Intermedialites / Intermediality, edited by Larisa Dryansky and Erika Wicky, vol. special issue: projeter / projection, no. 24–25, 2014. Manual, doi:10.7202/1034155ar.
Bowen D. The Diorama Effect: Gas, Politics, and Opera in the 1825 Paris Diorama. Dryansky L, Wicky E, editors. Intermedialites / Intermediality. 2014;special issue: projeter / projection(24–25).

Published In

Intermedialites / Intermediality

DOI

EISSN

1920-3136

ISSN

1705-8546

Publication Date

2014

Volume

special issue: projeter / projection

Issue

24-25

Related Subject Headings

  • 1901 Art Theory and Criticism