Poet

A Revelatory Exhibition Traces the Poet Dante’s Path Through Exile in Italy, and the Artworks He Likely Encountered—See Images Here


A new art exhibition in Italy takes an oblique look at the life of the poet Dante Alighieri, whose banishment from his native Florence in 1302 serves as the narrative lynchpin of the show. 

Dante, who is most famous for writing the Divine Comedy, was a Florentine government official when he was exiled in 1302 by political rivals. Forced to wander the Italian peninsula, he passed through Rome, Verona, and Bologna before finally setting in Ravenna, where he died of malaria in 1321, one year after completing his most famous work.

The exhibition at the Museo d’Arte della Città in Ravenna (“Art in Times of Exile,” through July 4) marks the 700th anniversary of his death and looks at the major artworks Dante may have seen on his travels.

Installation view. Credit MAR - Museo d'Arte della città di Ravenna.

Installation view. Credit MAR – Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna.

The show includes works by artists who were revered in Dante’s time, including Cimabue, who is represented by an important mosaic.

Works on view were borrowed from an array of institutions, including the Louvre and the Uffizi Galleries. The latter sent two works: the Stigmata di San Francesco by Maestro della Croce and the Badia Polyptych by Giotto di Bondone.

Other artists in the show include Arnolfo di Cambio, Nicola and Giovanni Pisano, and Giuliano da Rimini, all of whom were known to Dante.

“To think that our wonderful Byzantine mosaics influenced and inspired Dante in writing the last cantos of Paradise arouses great emotion and pride in us,” Ravenna’s mayor, Michele de Pascale, said in a statement.

“Prestigious loans from all over Europe are both expressions of timeless beauty and extraordinary sources for Dante’s inspiration, which informed the greatness of The Comedy and of the entire production of this supreme poet.”

See more images from the show below.

Installation view. Credit MAR - Museo d'Arte della città di Ravenna.

Installation view. Credit MAR – Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna.

Venetian-Ravenna master from the late 13th-century, Madonna Enthroned with Child. Paris, Musée du Louvre, Département des Sculptures, don. Jean-Charles Davillier. Credit MAR - Museo d'Arte della città di Ravenna.

Venetian-Ravenna master from the late 13th-century, Madonna Enthroned with Child. Paris, Musée du Louvre, Département des Sculptures, don. Jean-Charles Davillier. Credit MAR – Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna.

Installation view. Credit MAR – Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna.

Arnolfo di Cambio's <i>Bust of Pope Boniface VIII</i>. On loan from Vatican City, Fabbrica di San Pietro in Vaticano.

Arnolfo di Cambio’s Bust of Pope Boniface VIII. On loan from Vatican City, Fabbrica di San Pietro in Vaticano.

Giotto di Bondone's Polittico di Badia (1295-1297). Courtesy Uffizi Galleries.

Giotto di Bondone’s Polittico di Badia (1295-1297). Installation view. Credit MAR – Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna.

Installation view. Credit MAR - Museo d'Arte della città di Ravenna.

Installation view. Credit MAR – Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna.

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Poet Kostas Anagnopoulos Shares His Favorite Artworks from Midnight Publishing Group Galleries


Kostas Anagnopoulos is a creative in every sense of the word.

Whether he is working to provide award-winning services to clients in the gift, home, jewelry, and personal-accessories industries, or teaching poetry remotely with Creative Growth in San Francisco, Kostas is a master at aesthetics. 

After more than 20 years of working closely with visionary merchants and top retailers, Kostas opened Pidgin, a store in Oak Hill, New York, to sell the things that he loves, from antiques and old objects, to a selection of beautifully crafted new items. 

We caught up with Kostas to hear about his bucket-list destination, what he’s read recently, and some of his favorite works available right now from Midnight Publishing Group Galleries.

Kostas’ Favorite Things

Movie: Daguerréotypes by Agnes Varda

Restaurant: Prune

Bucket-list destination: Easter Island

Artist: Florine Stettheimer

Food to eat for breakfast: Whitefish salad on a toasted bialy with red onion, capers, and a squeeze of lemon

Museum: The Kimbell Art Museum.

Book you’ve read recently: Days by Simone Kearney

Artist in your collection: Jack Whitten

Design object: Olfa touch-knife

Party favor: A book of contemporary poetry

Way to celebrate success: Nachos and orange wine

 

Top Gallery Picks

 

Jane Freilicher
Parts of a World (1987)

Courtesy of Kasmin.

 

Bill Traylor
Blue Basket (1939–42)

Courtesy of Ricco/Maresca.

Prunella Clough
Interior (1988)

Courtesy of Flowers Gallery.

 

Theodoros Stamos
“Infinity Field-Lefkada” Series (1981)

Courtesy of Hollis Taggart.

Joan Brown
Figure #26 (1970)

Courtesy of George Adams Gallery.

 

Alvin Baltrop
The Piers (Hudson River) (1975–86)

Courtesy of Galerie Buchholz.

 

Minnie Evans
Untitled (Wing Figures) (1942–43)

Courtesy of ZQ Art Gallery.

 

James Van Der Zee
Broadway Delicatessen (ca. 1925)

Courtesy of Howard Greenberg Gallery.

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