Sydney Morning Herald: The resurrection of William Blake's illustrations on Dante's Divine Comedy
The Guardian: The Romantic poets: The Human Image and The Divine Image by William Blake
The Romantic poets: The Human Image and The Divine Image by William Blake
Tracks the change in total value of sales, as well as the total number of lots offered and sold annually in the art market. This chart shows whether William Blake’s total sales are going up, and if so ...
Washington City Paper: The NGA’s Latest Exhibition Considers the Art of Dante’s Divine Comedy
William Blake, “The Circle of the Lustful: Paolo and Francesca,” 1827 engraving; plate: 27.7 x 35.5 cm (10 7/8 x 14 in.), sheet: 43.7 x 59.9 cm (17 3/16 x 23 9/16 in.), mat: 50.8 x 60.9 cm (20 x 24 in ...
Smithsonian Magazine: Follow Dante Into Purgatory With Online Exhibition of ‘Divine Comedy’ Drawings
This 1465 fresco by Domenico di Michelino depicts Dante, holding a copy of The Divine Comedy, next to the entrance to hell. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons For centuries, Dante Alighieri’s Divine ...
Artnet news: And Lo! A Serpent with Six Feet Springs Forth on One (from Illustrations to Dante's Divine Comedy)
And Lo! A Serpent with Six Feet Springs Forth on One (from Illustrations to Dante's Divine Comedy)
BBC: William Blake: Biography offers glimpse into artist and poet's visionary mind
One day in 1801, when William Blake was living on the Sussex coast, he went on a long country walk when he got into an argument with a thistle. The artist, poet and musician, who experienced beatific ...