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Sandow Birk
Dante's Divine Comedy, 2002/2003
Illustrated book by Sandow Birk, depicting Dante's "Divine Comedy"
Bound book with lithographs
Edition of 100
14 ½ x 11 x 3 inches
MORE about this artworkDante's Divine Comedy
In this five-year project, Birk adapted the entire text of Dante's Divine Comedy into contemporary slang and set the action in contemporary urban America. The project resulted in three, limited edition books, Dante's Inferno, Dante's Purgatorio, and Dante's Paradiso, each containing more than 60 original lithographs and published by Trillium Press in San Francisco.
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Sandow Birk
Purgatorio, Canto XXV (vignette), 2003
Ink on mylar
14 x 13 inches unframed with matte
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Sandow Birk
Purgatorio, Canto IX: The Gates of Purgatory, 2003
Ink on mylar
8 x 10 inches
MORE about this artworkThis work is part of Sandow Birk's epic series "Dante's Divine Comedy," a five-year project, which involved adapting the text of Dante's entire "Divine Comedy" into contemporary slang and setting the action in urban America. The third book in the series, "Dante's Purgatorio," is set in San Francisco and contains multilingual icons and signs in Spanish, English, Chinese and Japanese, evoking San Francisco's multiculturalism. In "Purgatorio: Canto IX," Birk's gates of Pergatory resemble the facade of of a Hindu temple, commenting on the multiethnic and multiple faiths of our modern-day society.
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Sandow Birk
Purgatorio, Canto IX (vignette), 2003
Ink on mylar
14 x 13 inches unframed with matte
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Sandow Birk
Clip from Dante's Inferno: The Movie, 2007
Video
MORE about this artworkFrom the outset of Birk's Dante's Divine Comedy project, there was the intention to make a contemporary film without the aid of any computer effects whatsoever – to make a film that was true to a toy theatre production of the Victorian era. As with the book projects, the inspiration for the look of the film were the engravings of Gustave Doré, but now developed in the contemporary works of Birk’s illustrations – setting the action in urban America. The filmmakers wanted to retain the look of engravings in both the puppets and the world they inhabit. As the script was developed, each scene of the film was storyboarded and the action was broken down to specific movements and facial expressions. For each new feeling or action, a new puppet had to be made - more than 100 for protagonist Dante alone - resulting in more than 500 puppets in the production.