Timed to this year’s edition of Frieze London, the contemporary gallery Unit presented a group exhibition inspired by Dante’s Inferno. She was the great love of the Early Renaissance Italian poet ...
The Divine Comedy is more than 14,000 lines long and is divided into three parts, but it’s the first part, the Inferno, that gets all the attention. For centuries, readers have preferred the horrors ...
Venice: The painter/filmmaker's 700-year-spanning shrine to the Italian poet gives us two Oscar Isaacs — one in present-day, the other in 14th-century Florence and Renaissance Faire garb — and a ...
The Divine Comedy, the work of Florentine author Dante Alighieri, has become a bestseller in Japan in recent months. How is it that one of the most influential works in Western literature is causing ...
As arbiters of a fabulously relaxed, '90s-inspired style, British jeweller Rosh Mahtani of Alighieri and J. Crew’s creative director, Olympia Gayot, share far more than a love of oversized shirts, ...
Today, March 25, is Dantedì, a day that some believe signifies the commencement of the extraordinary journey of the Supreme Poet, who embarked on this path midway through his life in the year 1300.
Lasengle has released the CBC 2025 Servant on the Japanese server of Fate/Grand Order, and this year, we have Dante Alighieri. He’s a 5-star Pretender. In the game, Dante appears as a Pretender ...
How the Italian poet’s search for self-knowledge changed the course of literature. By Rowan Williams Studies of the reception and “afterlife” of classic works are becoming something of a trend. Last ...
Eric Warner is a Journalist and Multimedia Producer based in New England with over seven years of experience producing stories for multiple print, online, radio, and video publications. Eric has been ...
Alighieri Dante Montessori School is a public school located in East Boston, MA, which is in a large city setting. The student population of Alighieri Dante Montessori School is 108 and the school ...
Dante Alighieri: poet, philosopher and potentially the pettiest man in all of 14th-century Italy. Which is, to be clear, meant entirely as a compliment. If you’re not familiar with the name, and don’t ...