This exhibition showcases works inspired by The Divine Comedy completed from the Italian Quattrocento through the contemporary era, illustrating the profound and limitless artistic inspiration drawn from Dante’s source text. More recently, the poem’s first cantica, Inferno, has even been converted into a video game for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 consoles. It has been referenced by the likes of John F. In its over seven hundred years of existence, the poem has been illustrated by artists including Sandro Boticelli, Gustave Doré, and Salvador Dalí. With its graphic depictions of eternal punishment and redemption, Dante’s Divine Comedy has served as an artistic and moral template for artists, writers, politicians, and religious leaders since its original publication. Guided by the Roman poet Virgil, Dante explores hell ( Inferno), purgatory ( Purgatorio), and finally heaven ( Paradiso), where Virgil is replaced by Dante’s lost love, Beatrice. In the narrative epic, Dante recounts his journey through the realms of the Catholic afterlife, describing instances of suffering and salvation he witnessed during his travels. In the decade preceding his death, the Florentine poet and polymath Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) compiled The Divine Comedy, universally identified as a masterwork of Italian literature.
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