In the year 1824 Blake had finished his engravings for the Illustrations of the Book of Job. John Linnell had initiated the project of Blake creating engravings from the Job watercolors which were made years previously for Thomas Butts. Desiring to continue to encourage Blake's creative activities with monetary support, Linnell suggested that Blake illustrate Dante's Divine Comedy for him. Although Blake had severe disagreements with Dante's theology, he accepted Linnell's arrangement. His Dante illustrations absorbed Blake's attention and energies until the end of his life in 1827.
For the Divine Comedy there were 102 watercolor illustrations produced by Blake. In addition he engraved 6 plates; a remarkable accomplishment since he was in poor health and nearing death.
Blake followed Dante by painting and engraving a scene of the punishment of a thief named Agnello. The retribution was devised to fit the crime. The thief had stolen from him his own separate body by the six footed serpent.
National Gallery Victoria Blake's Illustrations to Divine Comedy Watercolor The Six-Footed Serpent Attacking Agnello dei Brunelleschi |
National Gallery Victoria Blake's Illustrations to Divine Comedy Engraving The Six-Footed Serpent Attacking Agnello dei Brunelleschi |
49 "As I kept my eyes fixed upon those sinners,
a serpent with six feet springs out against
one of the three, and clutches him completely.
It gripped his belly with its middle feet,
and with its forefeet grappled his two arms;
and then it sank its teeth in both his cheeks;
it stretched its rear feet out along his thighs
and ran its tail along between the two,
then straightened it again behind his loins.
No ivy ever gripped a tree so fast
as when that horrifying monster clasped
and intertwined the other’s limbs with its.
Then just as if their substance were warm wax,
they stuck together and they mixed their colors,
so neither seemed what he had been before;
just as, when paper’s kindled, where it still
has not caught flame in full, its color’s dark
though not yet black, while white is dying off.
The other two souls stared, and each one cried:
“Ah me, Agnello, how you change! Just see,
you are already neither two nor one!”
Then two heads were already joined in one,
when in one face where two had been dissolved,
two intermingled shapes appeared to us."
WILLIAM BLAKE"
No comments:
Post a Comment