Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Portrait of Beatrice
Portrait of Beatrice: Dante, D. G. Rossetti, and the Imaginary Lady | Fabio Camilletti
2 posts | 1 read | 1 to read
The Portrait of Beatrice examines both Dante's and D. G. Rossetti's intellectual experiences in the light of a common concern about visuality. Both render, in different times and contexts, something that resists clear representation, be it the divine beauty of the angel-women or the depiction of the painter's own interiority in a secularized age. By analyzing Dante's Vita Nova alongside Rossetti's Hand and Soul and St. Agnes of Intercession, which inaugurates the Victorian genre of 'imaginary portrait' tales, this book examines how Dante and Rossetti explore the tension between word and image by creating 'imaginary portraits.' The imaginary portrait--Dante's sketched angel appearing in the Vita Nova or the paintings evoked in Rossetti's narratives--is not (only) a non-existent artwork: it is an artwork whose existence lies elsewhere, in the words alluding to its inexpressible quality. At the same time, thinking of Beatrice as an 'imaginary Lady' enables us to move beyond the debate about her actual existence. Rather, it allows us to focus on her reality as a miracle made into flesh, which language seeks incessantly to grasp. Thus, the intergenerational dialogue between Dante and Rossetti--and between thirteenth and nineteenth centuries, literature and painting, Italy and England--takes place between different media, oscillating between representation and denial, mimesis and difference, concealment and performance. From medieval Florence to Victorian London, Beatrice's 'imaginary portrait' touches upon the intertwinement of desire, poetry, and art-making in Western culture.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Misanthropester
post image
Pickpick

Academic but not prohibitively so—Camilletti‘s prose style isn‘t dense though it is rigorous. For any creative this critical exploration of imaginary portraiture is fascinating

blurb
Misanthropester
post image

Today‘s #bookmail is some stellar literary academic reading