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700 Years of Dante’s Divine Comedy in Art
A man wakes deep in the woods, halfway through life. Far from home, unpermitted to return, his heart pierced by grief. He has strayed from the path. It's a dark night of the soul, his crisis so great that death becomes a tempting end. And then, as wild beasts advance upon this easy prey, his prayers are answered. A guide appears, promising to show him the way toward paradise. . .
Today marks the seventh centenary of Dante Alighieri's death, the Florentine poet who wrote The Divine Comedy, arguably our most ambitious Western epic. Eschewing Latin, the medieval currency of literature and scholarship, Dante wrote in his vernacular tongue, establishing the foundations for a standardized Italian language, and, by doing so, may have laid cultural groundwork for the unification of Italy.
The poet's impact on literature cannot be overstated. "Dante's influence was massive", writes Erich Auerbach, "he singlehandedly established the expressive possibilities and the landscape of all poetry to come, and he did so virtually out of thin air". And just as the classical Virgil served as Dante's guide through the Inferno, Dante became a kind of Virgil for later writers. Chaucer cribbed his rhythm and images, while Milton's Paradise Lost may have been actually lost, were it not for Dante as a shepherd. The Divina Commedia is a touchstone for works as diverse as fifteenth-century Castilian and Catalan verse; Gogol's Dead Souls (1842); and Mary Shelley's Italian Rambles (1844), which finds the poet at every turn:
If Dante's poetry summons landscapes before its reader's eyes, artists have tried, for the last seven hundred years, to achieve another kind of evocation: rendering the Commedia in precise images, evocative patterns, and dazzling color. By Jean-Pierre Barricelli's estimate, a complete catalogue of Commedia-inspired artworks would exceed 1,100 names. The earliest dated image comes from Florence in 1337, beginning the tradition soon after the poet's death in 1321. Before long, there were scores of other illustrations. As Rachel Owen notes, due to medieval guild production, early illustrations of the Commedia featured highly collaborative work, where a single miniature could pass through multiple hands, introducing variation in style across a single manuscript, but also conventions of representation.
Spanning the Late Middle Ages, Renaissance, and the rise and fall of Romanticism, the images gathered below reflect changing techniques for rendering perspective and summoning humanist pathos. While this evolution might be expected, the consistency with which artists have chosen specific Cantos from the Commedia is almost uncanny. And there are surprising gaps, as well — a dearth of Dantean images during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, perhaps in line with Goethe's quip, ca. 1824, that the Italian poet would soon be lost to obscurity. Nothing like this happened, however, for the mid-nineteenth century saw Dante's works become a popular subject for visual artists once again.
There are many reasons as to why the Commedia lends itself to depiction, the most simple being: there is so much to draw upon. Titans chained deep in hell; Ugolino pausing, mid-cannibalistic chomp, to converse with Dante and Virgil; the ecstatic ascent to the Empyrean; and other, seemingly endless configurations of the abject and miraculous.
The three-headed Satan has always been popular, frozen in the ninth circle of hell's last ring. In one of the earliest extant renderings, a Florentine illustration from ca. 1350, each head of the devil masticates Brutus, Judas, and Cassius: the ultimate traitors, whose treachery was itself a form of consumption: dismembering the Roman Republic and the son of God. An Early Renaissance engraving after Botticelli, but also credited to Orcagna, places Satan amid dozens of hellfiends, torturing various tormentees with saws, tridents, and snakes — gathering the evils that Dante has witnessed in previous circles. Francesco Scaramuzza returned to the same figure in the mid-nineteenth century, adding a thick layer of fur and soul piercing eyes.
To get out of the Inferno, Dante and Virgil must climb up the torso of Satan, emerging near the base of Purgatory. The mountain of salvation was formed by displacement: the impact of this angel crashing to earth. This is but one of the many careful harmonies built into the Commedia's totalizing vision. The epic's structure is almost fractal: three lines per stanza; thirty-three cantos per section; and three poetic movements (Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso), each respectively composed of nine circles, stages, and spheres. While this structure emerges gradually in the poem, artists have long tried to plot its coordinates. Placing Botticelli's well-known, external vision of the Inferno next to a bird's-eye view of Purgatory from 1568 reveals the symmetry between the first two sections of Dante's epic.
In Paradise, Dante is guided by his beloved Beatrice, who leads him toward the beatific vision. During Cantos 18–20, which take place in the sphere of Jupiter, they come across the Eagle of Justice, composed of myriad souls. An early Italian miniature (ca. 1450), shows the couple floating against an ultramarine background in conversation with the eagle's more-than-fifty faces. In a late-sixteenth century illustration by an unknown artist, the eagle's souls take on the eerie aspect of skulls. Francesco Scaramuzza adds a Romantic touch, where Dante soars, eyes closed by sublimity, carried on the raptor's talons.
The beatific vision, depicted both by a mid-sixteenth century woodcut and Gustave Doré (1880), capture, in juxtaposition, something of paradise's unchanging promise. The former, mandala-like arrangement positions angels in nine rings around God, while Doré — whose illustrations were so immediately influential that one critic, writing in 1861, felt that Dante and Doré were "communicating by occult and solemn conversations" — puts a blinding light in place of the divine.
As hinted at by the central couple in Doré's image, the Commedia ends with an affirmation of love, at once personal, galactic, and divine. “The love that moves the other stars“ (l'amor che move il sole e l'altre stelle). As Giuseppe Mazzotta notes, Inferno and Purgatorio also end with stelle. "So when Dante says that love moves the sun and other stars, what he's really doing is placing himself immediately right back on earth, back at the beginning of his quest. He's here with us looking up at the stars." And we are here with him, as artists have been for centuries, tracing out our own paths through his heavenly designs.
To commemorate the 700th anniversary of the poet's death, we have collected, below, visions of the Commedia from the last seven centuries. Each image is linked through to its source where you can often view more images in a series. And to dive further into Dante's work we highly recommend checking out Columbia University's Digital Dante project.
Illustration for Divina Commedia, ca. 1337 (Cod. Triv. 1080, c. 36r). – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXII: Dante grasps Bocca by the crown of his head (Egerton MS 533, f. 58r), ca. 1300–1350. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXIV: Dante and Virgil watch Lucifer who is devouring Cassius, Brutus, and Judas with three mouths (Egerton MS 533, f. 61r), ca. 1300–1350. – Source
Paradiso, Cantos XXV–XXVI: Dante turns toward the heavenly light (Egerton MS 533, f. 152r), ca. 1300–1350. – Source
Paradiso, Canto XXXII: They see the Rose of Heaven, worshipped by five angels (Egerton MS 533, f. 181r), ca. 1300–1350. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXIV: the three-headed Satan, ca. 1345–1355 (MS M.676 fol. 47r). – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXIV: Dante and Virgil emerge from Hell and see the stars (Add MS 19587, f. 60r), ca. 1370. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXV: The false counsellors; Dante and Virgil clamber out of the pit to the next summit (Add MS 19587, f. 44r), ca. 1370. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXIV: Dante and Virgil observe Satan swallowing his victims, with the souls of those who betrayed their benefactors, including Brutus and Judas Iscariot, frozen in ice below (Add MS 19587, f. 58r), ca. 1370. – Source
Inferno, Canto VII: Dante and Virgil are in a barren wood, with the harpies perched on top of thorny trees, representing the souls of suicides; hounds tear the body of the profligate Giacomo di Sant' Andrea to pieces (left); Virgil breaks off a twig and the wounded tree drips blood (center); the other profligate, Lano di Siena, runs away from the hounds (Add MS 19587, f. 21r), ca. 1370. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXII: Ugolino and Rugghieri (Plut. 90 inf. 42, 147v), ca. 1350–1400. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXIV: Lucifer tormenting Judas, Brutus, and Cassius (Plut. 90 inf. 42, 155r), ca. 1350–1400. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXV: Metamorphosis of Thieves (Plut. 90 inf. 42, 112v), ca. 1350–1400. – Source
Inferno, Canto XXII: Dante and Virgil watch Libicocco and Draghignazzo piercing Ciampolo of Navarre (Plut. 90 inf. 42, 102v), ca. 1350–1400. – Source
Inferno, Canto I: Dante awakes in the dark woods (Conv.Soppr.204, 1v). – Source
Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia, Paradiso, Canto I: Beatrice explaining scientific theories to Dante, including the appearance of the moon (Yates Thompson 36, f. 132), ca. 1450. – Source
Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia, Paradiso, Cantos XVIII–XX: Dante and Beatrice before the Eagle of Justice (Yates Thompson 36, f. 162), ca. 1450. – Source
Priamo della Quercia, Inferno, Canto: XXXIV: Dante and Virgil witnessing the gigantic Satan, with his three mouths biting on the sinners Cassius, Judas, and Brutus; Dante and Virgil emerge from the Inferno (Yates Thompson 36, f. 62v), ca. 1450. – Source
Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia, Paradiso: Dante and Beatrice before the Light (Yates Thompson 36, f. 179), ca. 1450. – Source
Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia, Paradiso, Canto I: Dante and Apollo before Parnassus (Yates Thompson 36, f. 129), ca. 1450. – Source
Domenico di Michelino, La Divina Commedia di Dante, 1465. Dante holding his poem open, outside of Florence (right), from where he was exiled. The damned descend to hell (left), while, on the mountain of purgatory (back), pennants circle below the garden of Adam and Eve. Above, the heavens, as concentric spheres. – Source
Federigo da Montefeltro, Divina Commedia, ca. 1478. Purgatorio, Canto XI: The Prideful. – Source
Federigo da Montefeltro, Divina Commedia, ca. 1478. Inferno, Canto I: Virgil and Dante meet in the woods. – Source
Baccio Baldini after Sandro Botticelli, Inferno, Canto XXXIV, ca. 1481. – Source
Attributed to Andrea di Cione di Orcagna, Inferno, Canto XXXIII–XXXIV, ca. 1470. – Source
Sandro Botticelli, Inferno, Canto XXXIV, ca. 1485. The Great Satan. – Source
Sandro Botticelli, La voragine infernale (Chart of Hell), ca. 1485. – Source
Sandro Botticelli, Inferno, Canto XVIII, ca. 1485. The Circle of Fraud. – Source
Sandro Botticelli, Paradise, Canto VI, ca. 1485. The Sphere of Mercury. – Source
Inferno, Canto XII: Phlegethon, the blood river that boils souls. La Commedia, with commentary by Christophorus Landinus (Brescia: Boninus de Boninis, de Ragusia, 1487). – Source
Inferno, Canto XXXI: The Titans. La Commedia, with commentary by Christophorus Landinus (Brescia: Boninus de Boninis, de Ragusia, 1487). – Source
*Purgatorio, Canto: XXI: The Earthquake. La Commedia, with commentary by Christophorus Landinus (Brescia: Boninus de Boninis, de Ragusia, 1487). – Source
Petrus de Plasiis, Divine Comedy, ca. 1491. Inferno, Canto XXXIV: Lucifer. One of the first fully-illustrated editions of the Commedia. – Source
Petrus de Plasiis, Divine Comedy, ca. 1491. Paradiso, Canto V: First Heaven, Sphere of the Moon. One of the first fully-illustrated editions of the Commedia. – Source
Woodcut diagram of the Inferno, ca. 1518. – Source
Woodcut of Paradiso, Canto XXIV, most likely colored in the 19th century. Dante meets St Peter. La comedy di Dante Aligieri con la nova espositione di Alessandro Vellvtello (Vinegia: Per Francesco Marcolini, 1544). – Source
Woodcut of Paradiso, Canto IX, most likely colored in the 19th century. Dante meets souls in the heaven of Venus. La comedy di Dante Aligieri con la nova espositione di Alessandro Vellvtello (Vinegia: Per Francesco Marcolini, 1544). – Source
Woodcut of Inferno, Canto XXXII, most likely colored in the 19th century. Satan in the frozen lake. La comedy di Dante Aligieri con la nova espositione di Alessandro Vellvtello (Vinegia: Per Francesco Marcolini, 1544). – Source
Woodcut of Paradiso, Canto XXVIII, most likely colored in the 19th century. The Empyrean. La comedy di Dante Aligieri con la nova espositione di Alessandro Vellvtello (Vinegia: Per Francesco Marcolini, 1544). – Source
Woodcut of Paradiso, Canto XXVII, ca. 1564. The Sphere of Fixed Stars. – Source
Wood cut of Paradiso, Canto XXI, ca. 1564. Ascent to the Seventh Heaven, the Sphere of Saturn. – Source
Map of Purgatory, from Dante: con l'espostione di M. Bernardino Daniello da Lucca (Venetia: Appresso Pietro da Fino, 1568). – Source
Unknown artist (possibly Stradanus), illustration for Paradiso, Canto 18, ca. 1575–1600. The Eagle of Justice. – Source
Unknown artist (possibly Stradanus), illustration for Paradiso, Canto XXVII, ca. 1575–1600. The Nine Orders of Angels. – Source
Unknown artist (possibly Stradanus), illustration for Paradiso, Cantos XXX–XXXII, ca. 1575–1600. The Candida Rosa. – Source
Frederico Zucarri, illustration for Inferno, Cantos V–VI, 1586–88. Cerberus and the Gluttonous. – Source
Frederico Zucarri, illustration for Inferno, Cantos XXXI–XXXII, 1586–88. The Ninth Circle: Giants. – Source
Johannes Stradanus, illustration for Inferno, Canto XXVIII, 1587. Souls mutilated eternally by devils. – Source
Johannes Stradanus, illustration for Inferno, Canto VIII, 1587. On the boat of Phlegyas, accosted by Filippo Argenti, who rises out of the river Styx. – Source
Johannes Stradanus, illustration for Inferno, Canto VII, 1587. Those guilty of avarice roll boulders. – Source
Cornelis Galle (I), Lucifer, after Stradanus, ca. 1590. Inferno, Canto XXXIV. – Source
John Flaxman, “Dante and Virgil in the Suicidal Wood”, 1793. Inferno, Canto XIII. – Source
John Flaxman, illustration for Inferno, Canto XX, 1793. The stricken spirits who cannot lift their bodies from the ground. – Source
John Flaxman, “E il capo tronco tenea” (Holding the stubborn head), 1793. Inferno, Canto XXVIII: Bertrand de Born, holding his head, for turning son against father. – Source
Filippo Machievelli, Divina commedia. Inferno, Canto XXXIII, 1819. Ugolino devouring Ruggieri. – Source
William Blake, “Ciampolo the Barrator Tormented by the Devils”, ca. 1824–1827. Inferno, Canto XXII. – Source
William Blake, “Antaeus Setting Down Dante and Virgil in the Last Circle of Hell”, ca. 1824–1827. Inferno, Canto XXXI. – Source
William Blake, “The Lovers' Whirlwind, Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta”, ca. 1824–1827. Inferno, Canto V. – Source
William Blake, “St Peter and St James with Dante and Beatrice”, 1824–1827. Paradiso, Cantos XXII–XXVII. – Source
William Blake, “Dante Running from the Three Beasts”, ca. 1824–1827. Inferno, Canto I. – Source
Joseph Anton Koch, detail from Casa Massimo frescoes in Ariosto Hall, Rome, 1825–1828. – Source
Joseph Anton Koch, detail from Casa Massimo frescoes in Ariosto Hall, Rome, 1825–1828. Inferno, Cantos XIV–XV: Maleboge, the eighth circle of Hell, where vengeful reptiles torture thieves. – Source
Joseph Anton Koch, detail from Casa Massimo frescoes in Ariosto Hall, Rome, 1825–1828. Inferno, Canto XVII: Virgil and Dante riding the monster Geryon. – Source
Francesco Scaramuzza, illustration for Purgatorio, Canto IX, ca. 1850. The Eagle of Justice. – Source
Francesco Scaramuzza, illustration for Inferno, Canto XXXIV, ca. 1850. The three-headed Lucifer. – Source
Adolphe-William Bouguereau, Dante et Virgile, 1850. Inferno, Canto XXX: Schicchi biting Capocchio. – Source
Michelangelo Caetani, Figura Universale Della Divina Commedia (Overview of the Divine Comedy), 1855. – Source
Michelangelo Caetani, Veduta Interna Dell'Inferno (Cross Section of Hell), 1855. – Source
Michelangelo Caetani, Figura Universale Della Divina Commedia (Overview of the Divine Comedy), 1855. – Source
Luigi Ademollo, Divina commedia. Inferno, Canto XXXIII, 1865. Heads frozen in the lake of Cocytus. – Source
Gustave Doré, illustration to Paradiso, Canto XXXI, 1880. The rose of saints and angels in the empyrean. – Source
Gustave Doré, illustration to Paradiso, Canto XIV, 1880. Dante and Beatrice move into the fifth heaven, Mars. – Source
Gustave Doré, illustration to Inferno, Canto XIX, 1880. The Simonists. – Source
Gustave Doré, Dante et Virgile dans le neuvième cercle de l'Enfer (Dante and Virgil in the ninth circle of Hell), 1861. Inferno, Canto XXXII: the heads of souls in the frozen lake of Cocytus. – Source
Gustave Doré, illustration to Inferno, Canto XXXI, 1880. The Titans. – Source
Gustave Doré, illustration to Paradiso, Canto XXVIII, 1880. The nine orders of angels surrounding God. – Source
Adolf von Stürler, Divina commedia, 1884. Inferno, Canto V: Minos guards the second circle's threshold, judging the damned. – Source
Adolf von Stürler, Divina commedia, 1884. Inferno, Canto XXXIII. He [Ugolino] gripped the sad skull [of Ruggieri] with his teeth. – Source
John Dickson Batten, “Petrified Dante supported by Virgil being transported down into lower Hell”, ca. 1890. Inferno, Canto XVII: the monster is Geryon. – Source
John Dickson Batten, “First Entrance of a Nervous Dante into Hell”, ca. 1890. Inferno, Canto III. – Source
Franz von Bayros, Paradiso Canto VIII, 1921. – Source
Sep 14, 2021