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Search: Colloquium 28 (Spring 2020)

April 8, 2020 @ 1:00 pm - 1:50 pm

Paris.Delacroix.Barque_of_Dante.1822

The Barque of Dante by Eugène Delacroix
Oil on canvas
1822
(H: 18.9 × W: 24.1 cm)

“No canvas better reveals the future of a great painter” —it was with these words that Thiers in 1822 described the first work submitted to the Salon by Delacroix, then still in his early twenties. With this novel subject inspired by Dante’s Inferno, the somber conception and profoundly dramatic composition, as well as references to Michelangelo and Rubens, the artist pushed painting in a new direction, soon to be qualified as “romantic.”
The time of classical painters imitating Greek and Roman art was over: they no longer had a place in current tastes. The underlying idea behind The Barque of Dante is that great geniuses from other lands have written works suffused with a way of seeing and feeling quite different from that of the French. Reading them stimulates the mind through new subject matter and the imagination through new boldness. So new, in fact, that Delacroix’s painting was not without its critics: “a real daub” was how Delécluze, a disciple of David, described it. Delacroix drew on the visionary writing of the Italian poet in order to create a painting of definite force and romanticism.
Although inspired by the mythological tradition, the subject of the work is the Italian poet Dante Alighieri (1265-1321). In the Divine Comedy (1306-21), Dante recounts his poetic visit to Hell, guided by Virgil. The Divine Comedy is divided into three parts: Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise. Dante’s voyage begins in Hell in the company of the Roman poet, passing through nine successive circles on his way to meet Beatrice, who will guide him through Paradise. In this scene, Dante and Virgil, piloted by Phlegyas, cross the lake surrounding the infernal city of Dis; the souls of the damned writhe in the water, trying to escape their fate by hanging onto the boat (from the catalogue entry by Vincent Pomarède).

Louvre, Paris

Reading

Dante, Inferno, cantos 1-16

For additional resources visit the Digital Dante and the World of Dante.

Topic of Discussion

We have read and discussed Enkidu’s vision of the underworld in tablet seven of the Epic of Gilgamesh, The Descent of Inanna, and Aeneas’ journey to the underworld in book six of the Aeneid to visit the shade of his father. Finally, the Qur’an contains a number of references to heaven and hell. (See especially sura 74). How do these visions in the underworld compare and contrast to Dante’s. For our discussion be prepared to share with the other members of the class your observations about three points of comparison between the Inferno and at least two of the ancient sources. Be sure to ground your comments with specific references to the texts, which you should bring to class.

Rubric for Colloquium

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Connecting to the Colloquium

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Quiz

Quiz 24 (Spring 2020)

Details

Date:
April 8, 2020
Time:
1:00 pm - 1:50 pm
Event Category:

Venue

Online