The Guardian (USA)

Italy begins year of Dante anniversar­y events with virtual Uffizi exhibition

- Angela Giuffrida in Rome

Eighty-eight rarely seen drawings of Dante’s The Divine Comedy have been put on virtual display as Italy begins a year-long calendar of events to mark the 700th anniversar­y of the poet’s death.

The drawings, by the 16th-century Renaissanc­e artist Federico Zuccari, are being exhibited online, for free, by the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.

“Until now these beautiful drawings have only been seen by a few scholars and displayed to the public only twice, and only in part,” said Eike Schmidt, the Uffizi’s director. “Now they are published in full, alongside a didactic-scientific comment, where from [Friday] they will be freely available.”

Dante Alighieri, known as the father of the Italian language, was born in Florence in 1265 and died and was buried in Ravenna in 1321. His epic poem, The Divine Comedy, is split into three parts and traces a pilgrim’s journey through hell, purgatory and heaven.

The sketches were completed by Zuccari during a stay in Spain between 1586 and 1588. Of the 88 illustrati­ons, 28 are depictions of hell, 49 of purgatory and 11 of heaven. After Zuccari’s death in 1609, the drawings were held by the noble Orsini family, for whom the artist had worked, and later by the Medici family before becoming part of the Uffizi collection in 1738.

Owing to their fragility, only a selection of the pencil-and-ink drawings have been exhibited publicly in the past. The first time was in Florence in 1865 to mark the 600thanniv­ersary of Dante’s birth as well as the Italian unificatio­n, and the second time was for an exhibition in Abruzzo in 1993.

“The Uffizi Gallery is really proud to open the anniversar­y of the great poet’s death by making this extraordin­ary collection of graphic art available to all,” said Schmidt. He added that the works were “valuable material” not only for researcher­s but also for those passionate about Dante and interested in his pursuit of “knowledge and virtue”.

Events commemorat­ing the anniversar­y of Dante’s death are expected to take place throughout the year in Florence, Ravenna and 70 other towns and villages connected to the poet.

 ?? Photograph: Roberto Palermo/AP ?? Ulisse and Diomede, the fraudulent advisers, in a drawing of The Divine Comedy by Federico Zuccari.
Photograph: Roberto Palermo/AP Ulisse and Diomede, the fraudulent advisers, in a drawing of The Divine Comedy by Federico Zuccari.

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