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Rachel Owen: Illustrations for Dantes 'Inferno'

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Rachel Owen: Illustrations for Dantes 'Inferno'

Contributors:

By (Author) David Bowe

ISBN:

9781851245703

Publisher:

Bodleian Library

Imprint:

Bodleian Library

Publication Date:

1st January 2022

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Poetry by individual poets
Illustration
Prints and printmaking
Classic and pre-20th century poetry

Dewey:

741.64092

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

128

Dimensions:

Width 237mm, Height 259mm

Weight:

952g

Description

Rachel Owens hauntingly beautiful illustrations for Dantes Inferno take a radically new approach to representing the world of Dantes famous poem. The images combine the artists deep cultural and historical understanding of 'The Divine Comedy' and its artistic legacy with her unique talent for collage and printmaking. These illustrations, casting the viewer as a first-person pilgrim through the underworld, prompt us to rethink Dantes poem through their novel perspective and visual language.

Owens work, held in the Bodleian Library and published here for the first time, illustrates the complete cycle of thirty-four cantos of the Inferno with one image per canto. The illustrations are accompanied by essays contextualising Owens work and supplemented by six illustrations intended for the unfinished Purgatorio series. Fiona Whitehouse provides details of the techniques employed by the artist, Peter Hainsworth situates Owens work in the field of modern Dante illustration and David Bowe offers a commentary on the illustrations as gateways to Dantes poem. Jamie McKendrick and Bernard ODonoghues translations of episodes from the 'Inferno' provide complementary artistic interpretations of Dantes poem, while reflections from colleagues and friends commemorate Owens life and work as an artist, scholar and teacher. This stunning collection is an important contribution to both Dante scholarship and illustration.

'For seven hundred years artists armed with pens, needles and brushes have been eager to accompany Dante into hell. Rachel Owen decided to take her camera as well, and returned with images which she mixed with found materials and bold markers plus a few dashes of colour to create what seem like daring stills from a film noir of Dante's journey.' Tom Phillips

'Rachel Owens bold incorporation of personal imagery is faithful to the spirit of Dantes poem, to which she sends us back with a renewed sense of universal appeal.' Professor Gervase Rosser

Reviews

"Among all the new Dante commentaries, conferences, festivals, and translations of 2021, one publication in particular stands out as truly momentous: Rachel Owen's Illustrations for Dante's 'Inferno.' Not since Salvador Dal's one hundred watercolors of The Divine Comedy (1951-1960) and Robert Rauschenberg's equally extraordinary transfer drawings of Inferno (1958-1960) has an artwork reimagined Dante's netherworld with such novelty and originality. . . . Owen's photographic prints reveal just how unbounded Dante's afterlife is when imaginative artists reenvision it."--Robert Pogue Harrision "The New York Review of Books"
"More than 'illustrations, ' Rachel Owen's images work powerfully on the viewer, who is invited to become the pilgrim/Dante and so to experience The Divine Comedy with an unprecedented directness. Her bold incorporation of personal imagery is faithful to the spirit of the poem, to which she sends us back with a renewed sense of Dante's universal appeal. This beautiful tribute from poets and Dante specialists to one who was herself both a scholar and an artist is a significant contribution to all of these fields."-- "Gervase Rosser, University of Oxford"

Author Bio

Rachel Owen (1968-2016) was a Welsh photographer, printmaker and lecturer on medieval Italian literature. She taught at Pembroke College and at other colleges within the University of Oxford. Owen mixed photography with printmaking and her work explored ideas of transformation using photographic screenprints. David Bowe is an Irish Research Council postdoctoral fellow in the Italian Department of University College Cork and co-director of the Centre for Dante Studies in Ireland.

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