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Kudzanai Chiurai, Charity (2013)

April 28, 2022 By Sephora Affa, FSU '24

pop-art-naomi-campbell-charles-taylor-mia-farrow-pink-building-background

“Dante echoes Saint Paul (Rom. 5:1-5) when he shows charity as born of hope, in turn generated by faith. These three virtues sum up all the celestial philosophy and constitute the very condition of salvation. Within the doctrinal field, the word indicates the fundamental attitude of the Father towards all His creatures, a relationship that finds its perfect form in the blessed [. . .] (Purgatorio, Canto XV, 71).”

Retrieved from The Divine Comedy: Heaven, Purgatory, and Hell Revisited by Contemporary African Artists by Simon Njami.

To learn more about the Zimbabwean artist and activist Kudzanai Chiurai, see Wikipedia. Read an interview with the artist about his related 2012 video work Iyeza on the RISD Museum blog.

 

 

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2013, Africa, Art Books, Charity, Christianity, Collages, Pop Culture, Purgatorio, St. Paul, Zimbabwe

Imago Dantis

November 16, 2021 By Hannah Raisner, FSU '25

screenshot-of-images-from-site

“I have a vast collection of publications related to the illustrations of Divine Comedy that extends to the most varied artistic expressions from the 18th C to date and beyond, along the latitudes of the poet’s visionary grip in the the world and its various
geographic-cultural areas.

The work that I present here is the figurative result of my visual study of the iconographic themes of the first part of Dante’s poem, Hell, through the aforementioned tradition and illustrative plurality. The 34 songs of Hell are represented with a mixed technique: manual, marker + coloured ink, and digital, with insertions of manipulated images. An original version of collaging then. This blog is together [a] presentation of the illustrations and understanding of their creative process.

Hence, in each canto-cover you will find the following in-sight information:

My illustration of each canto/song

A choice of the main verses from the poem in ‘cloud’ format

My interpretative notes of the main figurative themes

A very small selection of the many sources that inspired me.”    –Contributor Maurizio Coglia

The digital collages can be viewed at Coglia’s website imagodantisinferno.com

 

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: Blogs, Cantos, Collages, Hell, Visual Arts

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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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