Panorama Mama
In Los Angeles, bulldozers are circling Sara Velas' mural in the round
- By Ed Leibowitz
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Although Velas had driven past the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Western Avenue dozens of times without noticing the circular building strewn with garbage and overflowing with weeds, it was not until March 2000 that she set her eyes—and her hopes—on the Polynesian-style structure, which in various incarnations had housed a Chinese restaurant, a travel agency and a pizzeria. “I thought, ‘Oh my God, what an amazing building.’ It looked so much like those panorama rotundas I’d seen.” She signed a lease, and after ten months of hauling trash, pulling weeds and building the interior walls on which to mount The Panorama of the Valley of the Smokes, she held a gala opening; a juggler, two fortunetelling cats and an organ grinder with a sock-puppet monkey entertained the guests. Velas set a $2 suggested admission fee and filed for nonprofit status. Actress Diane Keaton has proved an especially generous donor, and Brad Pitt has called the place “a little oasis in Hollywood.”
Velas cites two main artistic inspirations: the 19th-century German Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich and flamboyant circus showman P. T. Barnum. “I love the way Barnum could get away with saying almost anything to get people into his entertainments,” she says. In his spirit, Velas has hosted old-fashioned ice-cream socials, an Ides of March celebration and an annual séance series, at which silent-movie vamp Theda Bara recently showed up, in a rather foul mood.
As the panorama’s days dwindle, Velas is planning another gala for the rotunda, this one of farewell—half-celebration and half-wake. “We’re going to have a guy who’s part of a 19th-century brass band play taps,” she says. “And we’re going to give out little pieces of the garden to the guests so they can replant them wherever they want.” With much fanfare, she’ll remove the giant cherry from the hut’s summit for safekeeping and future installation.
In late March, Velas learned that the early-1900s Union Theatre, a modest brick movie venue most recently used as a church, might be available to rent. It’s not a rotunda, but Velas is confident she can construct a round interior framework. She also hopes to “create a space where you could enter the panorama through the center, instead of through a door that breaks the continuity of the painting.” And she appreciates the irony of displaying her art in a movie house. “Panoramas died out partly because of the rise of the moving image,” she says, “so the idea of a panorama taking over a movie theater is a very fun possibility.”
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Comments (5)
Sara - You are one truly quirky, and intriguing, young woman!
I recently saw you on "Huelly's" update episode. As a California-based preservationist (member: Corona Historic Preservation Society and La Quinta Historical Society) I was very sad to see the original panorama building was demolished. So many times, the originality and true value of a structure are never realized. When that occurs, we all lose. Your new building, however, is an exciting example of "Never say die!" and I congratulate you for your dedication and intense desire to bring something old that is new and simple yet exciting to those who can view it. Someday, I am going to drive the 130 miles and relish your efforts. Thank you for being you.
Posted by Jim Bryant on September 15,2011 | 05:15 AM
Hello Sarah,
We live in Santa Barbara next to your folks house I think.
Saw you on Huel Howser.
Very cool
Thanks ,
John
Posted by John Ahlman on August 22,2011 | 10:51 PM
No, the Panorama moved south to the West Adams district, and a home inside an old movie theater, after the wonderful round building and surrounding gardens in Hollywood were demolished for a project which never came to fruition. The panorama now on view is a different one, of an arctic scene.
Posted by Kim Cooper on February 10,2010 | 05:31 PM
Yes, it's still there: http://www.panoramaonview.org/
Posted by Paul in NJ on April 1,2008 | 08:07 PM
I would like to see a follow-up story on Sara Velas and if the panorama is still housed in the old movie theater. There is a large panorama of "Pilgrim's Progress housed at the Dyer Library in Saco Maine where it was found in a basement by a former curator. There was an exibition held at the Portland, Maine Museum of Art in 2000. There would make a great feature story. Mona Longley
Posted by Mona Longley on February 12,2008 | 10:05 AM