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Mapping Dante’s Inferno, One Circle of Hell at a Time

July 8, 2019 By Gabriel Siwady '19

“I found myself, in truth, on the brink of the valley of the sad abyss that gathers the thunder of an infinite howling. It was so dark, and deep, and clouded, that I could see nothing by staring into its depths.”

“This is the vision that greets the author and narrator upon entry the first circle of Hell—Limbo, home to honorable pagans—in Dante Alighieri’s Inferno, the first part of his 14th-century epic poem, Divine Comedy. Before Dante and his guide, the classical poet Virgil, encounter Purgatorio and Paradiso, they must first journey through a multilayered hellscape of sinners—from the lustful and gluttonous of the early circles to the heretics and traitors that dwell below. This first leg of their journey culminates, at Earth’s very core, with Satan, encased in ice up to his waist, eternally gnawing on Judas, Brutus, and Cassius (traitors to God) in his three mouths. In addition to being among the greatest Italian literary works, Divine Comedy also heralded a craze for “infernal cartography,” or mapping the Hell that Dante had created.

“This desire to chart the landscape of Hell began with Antonio Manetti, a 15th-century Florentine (like Dante himself) architect and mathematician. He diligently worked on the “site, form and measurements” of Hell, assessing, for example, the width of Limbo—87.5 miles across, he calculated. There are several theories for why it was so important then to delineate Dante’s Hell, including the general popularity of cartography at the time and the Renaissance obsession with proportions and measurements.” […]    –Anika Burgess, Atlas Obscura, July 13, 2017

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture, Written Word
Tagged with: 2017, Circles of Hell, Drawings, Florence, Galileo, Hell, Inferno, Manetti, Maps, Renaissance

Performance for the Millennial Celebration of San Miniato al Monte (2018)

May 28, 2018 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

san-miniato-1000-terzine-dante“In occasione del Millenario di San Miniato, sabato 26 maggio, dalle h. 19.00 (partenza via dell’Erta Canina ang. via Monte alle Croci) centinaia di cantori saliranno dal quartiere di San Niccolò fino all’abbazia, recitando e interpretando le terzine dantesche dedicate al tema del cammino e della salita.

“‘A salire a le stelle /Legato con amore in un volume ciò che per l’universo si squaderna’ è una performance corale i cui protagonisti sono 306 cantori, il pubblico e le strade di Firenze, che tornano ad essere luogo di incontro per i cittadini, grazie a una esperienza culturale comune. I 306 cantori sono infatti di varia estrazione: ragazzi, professionisti, detenuti, personalità della vita pubblica, studenti, educatori, persone in stato di disagio psichico e/o economico, migranti, persone con la sindrome di Down, ragazzi che praticano il Parkour, i musicanti della Filarmonica di Marcialla, persone comuni e fuori dalla norma.” — Gonews.it

The performance was organized by the association Culter as part of their Piume | Dante 2021 program.

Contributed by Irene Zanini-Cordi (Florida State University)

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2018, Florence, Italy, Performance Art

Piume Dante 2021 Performance (June 24 and 25, 2016)

May 28, 2018 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“Prosegue in vista delle celebrazioni del 2021 l’esplorazione dell’universo dantesco che Culter da anni propone attraverso azioni sceniche e corali a cui partecipano come protagonisti centinaia di donne, uomini, bambini fra cui detenuti, migranti, persone affette dalla sindrome di Down, persone con disagio economico, fisico e psichico e a rischio di esclusione sociale.

“PIUME | DANTE2021 Legato con amore in un volume, ciò che per l’universo si sqauderna è stata un’azione performativa verticale, dedicata al tema del volo nella Divina Commedia. Salendo all’interno del Campanile il pubblico ha attraversato spazi diversi incontrando prima un popolo di uccelli, simbolo del desiderio alla dimensione oltremondana che assume le forme metriche e meccaniche delle ali, per poi arrivare infine nell’ultimo piano, vicino al cielo, allo slancio di Ulisse, colui che non ha bisogno di piume per provare a volare.” — Culter.it

The performance was staged at the Campanile di Giotto at Santa Maria del Fiore in Florence, at dawn and at sunset on June 24 and 25, 2016.

See an article covering the event here (with photos, in Italian).

See a video describing the performance here (in Italian).

FIRENZE – prove spettacolo teatrale
foto Opera del Duomo Firenze/ Claudio Giovannini

 

 

 

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2016, Florence, Italy, Performance Art

Campo di Marte, Florence (Italy), March 2018

March 5, 2018 By Professor Arielle Saiber

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2018, Campo di Marte, Florence, Graffiti, Italy

Dante graffiti in Florence

May 29, 2017 By Professor Arielle Saiber

Florence, Italy (near Piazza della Repubblica)
Photographed by Virginia Marchesi, May 25, 2017

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2017, Florence, Graffiti, Humor, Italy

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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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