DANTE TODAY: citings and sightings of Dante’s works in contemporary culture.
Seymour Chwast: la Divina Commedia come graphic novel. CLICCA QUI.
Oblivion: L’Inferno in sei minuti.
Inferno: The RAP Translation. In July 2013, Melbourne-based hip hop artist Hugo released a rap translation of the first six cantos of Inferno. Here is Hugo’s description of the project… LEGGI TUTTO.
Emoticon Art: la Divina Commedia.GUARDA IL VIDEO.
Metamorfosi (rock progressive, 1973): Inferno. CLICCA QUI.
TV DANTE, di Peter Greenaway e Tom Phillips. GUARDA IL VIDEO.
This ambitious program, produced by the award-winning film director Peter Greenaway and internationally-known artist Tom Phillips, brings to life the first eight cantos of Dante’s Inferno. Featuring a cast that includes Sir John Gielgud as Virgil, the cantos are not conventionally dramatized. Instead, the feeling of Dante’s poem is conveyed through juxtaposed imagery that conjures up a contemporary vision of hell, and its meaning is deciphered by eminent scholars in visual sidebars who interpret Dante’s metaphors and symbolism. This program makes Dante accessible to the MTV generation. Caution to viewers: program contains nudity. (8 segments, 11 minutes each).
Inferno a fumetti. CLICCA QUI…
DIVINI COMICS: L’INFERNO DI DANTE NEL FUMETTO.
L’opera di Dante in versione manga: GO NAGAI, La Divina Commedia, 1994 (Jpop, 2014)
Silly Symphony, Hell’s Bells, 1929
Styx, directed by Aike Arndt, 2007
Classic summarized
Dante e la pubblicità: CLICCA QUI.