The Divine Comedy
In the early 1950s, in celebration of the 700th birthday of the great Italian poet Dante Alighieri, the Italian government commissioned the Surrealist master Salvador Dalí to create 100 illustrations for a commemorative edition of The Divine Comedy. Dalí’s hyperrealistic, bizarre, and nightmarish imagery seemed like the perfect pairing to Dante’s visions of Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise, yet public outcry against the commissioning of a Spanish artist to accompany the work of an Italian cultural hero forced the Italian government to revoke its support for the project. Undaunted, Dalí worked with a French publisher to have 100 wood engravings (one for each of _The Divine Comedy_’s verses) made after his own watercolors, which were completed and published in 1963.
Series by this artist
- The Divine Comedy379 available
- Dante48 available
- The Bible34 available
- Venus30 available
- Fruits27 available
- Signs of the Zodiac26 available
- Faust23 available
- Mythologies20 available
- Elephants19 available
- Don Quixote18 available
- Shakespeare17 available
- Butterflies16 available
- Les Amours de Cassandre16 available
- Lobsters9 available
- Casanova9 available
- Melting Clocks9 available
- Poems5 available
- Les Diners de Gala5 available
- Memories of Surrealism4 available
- Playing Cards1 available