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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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Dante’s Inferno – A Natural History

June 7, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

dantes-inferno-a-natural-history

dantes-inferno-a-natural-history-illustrations

Dante’s Inferno has been extensively illustrated, with accompanying notes, by Fabrica, a brand new book published by Mondadori, appearing in bookstores from May 25, 2010. More than 300 illustrations, all hand-made using different techniques and all accompanied by in-depth notation: a meticulous work, which gives the reader a fresh and original interpretation of one of the greatest masterpieces of everlasting literature. Fabrica assigned this project to two young English artists, Patrick Waterhouse and Walter Hutton.

Watch the making of the book on Vimeo.

Contributed by Patrick Molloy

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture, Written Word
Tagged with: 2010, Drawings, Illustrated Books, Illustrations, Italy, Natural History, United Kingdom

Agnolo Bronzino at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2010)

March 3, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

bronzino-head-of-dante-metropolitan-museum-of-art
Agnolo Bronzino (1503-1572), “Head of Dante in Profile Facing Right and Wearing a Cap,” 1532

“This exhibition is the first ever dedicated to Agnolo Bronzino (1503-1572), and presents nearly all the known drawings by or attributed to this leading Italian Mannerist artist, who was active primarily in Florence.” [. . .]    —The Metropolitan Museum of Art

“. . .A leading intellectual of the time testified that the painter had memorized all of Dante and much of Petrarch.” [. . .]   –Peter Schejeldahl, The New Yorker, March 3, 2010

Contributed by Patrick Molloy

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 1532, 2010, Dante Portraits, Drawings, Italy, New York City

Yola Monakhov, “Photography After Dante” (2010)

March 1, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

yola-monakhov-photography-after-dante-2010

“For this body of work, Monakhov used Dante’s Divine Comedy as a source and framework for creating photographs in contemporary Italy. Her approach intended to bring together a canonical text and contemporary life, using the poem to investigate conventions of the photographic medium.
Monakhov’s method involved establishing an active relationship with her Italian subjects, who were well versed in their native Dante. She noted their reactions to moments in the poem, and linked these with her own reading and photographic vision. Photographing in Italy, she discovered that when she explained her project to her subjects, they not only intuitively grasped her premise, they also reacted to and enacted it. One subject, Paola, implored the photographer: ‘Please do not put me in the Inferno,’ as though this first stage of the pilgrim’s journey were a real place, rather than a poet’s construct.
Monakhov does not stage illustrations. Rather, she uses photography to start and record a very real conversation about Dante with the people who read him and for whom the poem is still very much alive. She uses a range of approaches, from formal portrait sessions to verite’ photography. Just as the text draws on numerous literary registers to evoke the atmosphere and context relevant for each occasion, Monakhov deploys a variety of photographic methods. She uses large format, medium format, and 35mm black-and-white film.”    —Sasha Wolf Gallery

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2010, Italy, New York City, Photography

Sand Sculptures of Dante’s Inferno

February 24, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

sand-sculptures-of-dantes-inferno

“These particular sand sculptures are actually inspired depictions of the circles of hell, as presented in Dante’s Inferno. The sculptures were created in Italy by a team of 18 of the world’s greatest sand sculpture artists. The result, as you can see in this Flickr stream by user Htmarcos, is simply breathtaking.”    –Jill Harness, Mental Floss, February 24, 2010

See more photos on Flickr and Love These Pics.

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2010, Festivals, Inferno, Italy, Sculptures, Venice

“Fa come natura fece in foco”: Glassworks Exhibit at the Venice Biennale

August 12, 2009 By Professor Arielle Saiber

padiglione-vezenia-biennale“In 1972, glass ceased to have its own section at the Venice Biennale, when the inclusion of what were considered ‘decorative arts’ was abandoned. But at this year’s event, glass has made a comeback in two separate shows: ‘Glasstress,’ an official parallel exhibition at Palazzo Cavalli Franchetti on the Grand Canal, and ‘Fa come natura fece in foco,’ which borrows a line from Dante’s Divine Comedy (‘Do as nature does in the flame’) [Paradiso IV, 59] to evoke the fiery glass furnaces of Murano, at the Padiglione Venezia in the Biennale’s Castello Gardens (both until Nov. 22).” [. . .]    –Roderick Conway Morris, The New York Times, August 7, 2009

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2009, Glassworks, Italy, Paradiso, Venice

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How to Cite

Coggeshall, Elizabeth, and Arielle Saiber, eds. Dante Today: Citings and Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture. Website. Access date.

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