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Harriet Moore’s Paintings and Sculptures of the Comedy

April 26, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

harriet-moores-paintings-and-sculptures-of-the-comedy“Harriet Grannis Moore, well-known San Francisco sculptor and instructor in stone and clay, created a series of paintings inspired by Dante’s Divine Comedy in the 70s and early 80s. The paintings, measuring 9 feet high by 4 feet, will be accompanied by related ceramic sculpture.
Thirty years ago the noted San Francisco sculptor Harriet Moore was obsessed with Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. By the time she was finished (or it was finished with her), she had painted more than 20 nine-foot by 4-foot panels and completed 22 related sculptures in terracotta, bronze, and wood. Fifteen of the panels and several sculptures (on loan from a private collector) will be shown this spring in ‘Harriet Moore: The Divine Comedy.’ The exhibition opens April 18 and continues through June 27. The opening reception is scheduled for Sunday, April 18, from 1 to 4 p.m.”    —Peninsula Art Museum (retrieved on April 26, 2010)

See Peninsula Art Museum homepage.

Contributed by Patrick Molloy

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2010, Burlingame, California, Paintings, Sculptures

Herman Melville’s Copy of the Comedy

April 26, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

herman-melvilles-copy-of-the-comedy“. . . Associate professor of English Steven Olsen-Smith is a leader in that scholarly community. He is the primary researcher responsible for tracking the recovery of Melville’s dispersed personal library of around 1,000 books and serves as general editor of Melville’s Marginalia Online, a long-term project devoted to the editing and publication of markings and annotations in the books that survive from Melville’s library.
Olsen-Smith recently borrowed Melville’s copy of Dante’s ‘Divine Comedy’ from collector William Reese as part of the Marginalia project’s pending transition to a new digital format that will display photographic images of marked and annotated books with commentary on their significance to Melville’s writings. The book will be on campus through March 31, and Olsen-Smith’s student interns currently are working to catalog notations and recover erasures. . .
‘Melville marked subject matter dealing with issues of free will and fate, original sin and divine justice, and aspects of subject matter and rhetoric that relate to the book’s epic character,’ Olsen-Smith said. ‘It is clear Melville read and marked the book at different points throughout his life, and the interns are identifying parallels between the marginalia to Dante and subject matter in his writings.'” [. . .]    –Erin Ryan, Boise State University Update, March 31, 2010

Contributed by Patrick Molloy

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2010, Catalogues, Collections, Universities

“For Mets, Gloom and Doom…”

April 4, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

for-mets-gloom-and-doom

“‘Abandon hope, all ye who enter here.’ That’s what I would write if I felt like paying $395 for a commemorative brick outside the Mets’ ballpark. That sentiment from the poet Dante Alighieri’s Inferno is applicable to the new baseball season, normally a time of hope, but not in Queens, not this year and maybe not anytime soon.” [. . .]    –George Vecsey, The New York Times, April 2, 2010

Categories: Odds & Ends
Tagged with: 2010, Abandon All Hope, Baseball, Mets, New York City, Sports

The Wire

March 21, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

the-wire

“…the literary critic Walter Benn Michaels went so far as to suggest that the beauty and difficulty of watching “The Wire” in English — the multifarious 21st-century English of Baltimore detectives and drug dealers — compares with that of reading Dante in 14th-century Italian.” [. . .]    –Wyatt Mason, The New York Times, March 15, 2010

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2010, Language, Television

Peter Nathaniel Malae, “What We Are” (2010)

March 21, 2010 By Professor Arielle Saiber

peter-nathaniel-malae-what-we-are-2010The protagonist of the novel, Paul, names a book of poetry after his girlfriend, Beatrice La Dulce Shaliqua Schneck “and after Dante’s muse, presumably because he, too, was a poet who made his fame in hell.” [. . .]    –Fiona Maazel, The New York Times, March 18, 2010

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2010, Fiction, Journalism, Novels, Reviews

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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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