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Purgatorio, Canto 5: Dante Speaks with Pia de Tolomei by Gustave Dore

Purgatorio, Canto 5: Dante Speaks with Pia de Tolomei

(Purgatorio, Canto 5 : Dante speaks with Pia de Tolomei)


Gustave Dore

€ 119.3
Enthält 0% MwSt.
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1885  ·  digital gefärbte Gravur  ·  Image ID: 630261

Romanticism

Purgatorio, Canto 5: Dante Speaks with Pia de Tolomei by Gustave Dore. Available as an art print on canvas, photo paper, watercolor board, natural paper, or Japanese paper.
Private Collection / Bridgeman Images
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Summary

Gemälde
Veredelung
Keilrahmen
Museumslizenz

€ 119.3
(inkl. 20% MwSt)
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Bildschärfe: PERFEKT

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The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 5: Dante speaks with Pia de Tolomei - Illustration by Gustave Dore Purgatorio, Canto 27: Dante Purgatorio, Canto 28: Dante, Virgil, and Statius in the ancient forest of the terrestrial paradise (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 7: The spirits singing Salve Regina in the dell (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 1: The poets behold the beauty of Venus in the morning sky (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 13: The suicides in the forest (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 7: The poet Sordello, astonished, kneels before Virgil (illustration from The Divine Comedy) The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 28: Dante, Virgil, and Statius in the ancient forest of the terrestrial paradise - by Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) - Illustration by Gustave Dore (1832-1883) Purgatorio, Canto 33: Dante Drinks of the River Eunoe, Illustration from Purgatorio, Canto 16: Dante speaks to the soul of Marco Lombardo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Paradiso, Canto 3: The first realm: Piccarda Donati and the souls whose vows had been broken (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 23: Dante recognizes the shade of Forese Donati among the gluttons (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 4: Homer, the poets, and heroes in Limbo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 24: The gluttonous souls crying out beneath the tree (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) Inferno, Canto 10: Farinata degli Uberti addresses Dante (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) Purgatorio, Canto 4: The indolent souls beside the rock (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 10: The marble sculptures portraying pride (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 25: The Poets in the Seventh Circle, Illustration from "The Divine Comedy" by Dante Alighieri, 1885 Inferno, Canto 34: Virgil and Dante ascend to the upper world (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 1: The She-Wolf Appears, Illustration from Inferno, Canto 2: Beatrice and Virgil (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 23: The souls of the gluttonous (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 1: Dante in the savage wood (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) Inferno, Canto 19: Dante rebukes Pope Nicholas III Are you sure, That we are awake It seems to me That yet we sleep, we dream (illustration from Purgatorio, Canto 13: Sapia cleanses his guilty life (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 1: Virgil and Dante begin their journey (illustration from The Divine Comedy) The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 1: The poets behold the beauty of Venus in the morning sky - Illustration by Gustave Dore Illustration by Arthur Rackham for A Midsummer Night
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Similar artworks selected for you

The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 5: Dante speaks with Pia de Tolomei - Illustration by Gustave Dore Purgatorio, Canto 27: Dante Purgatorio, Canto 28: Dante, Virgil, and Statius in the ancient forest of the terrestrial paradise (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 7: The spirits singing Salve Regina in the dell (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 1: The poets behold the beauty of Venus in the morning sky (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 13: The suicides in the forest (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 7: The poet Sordello, astonished, kneels before Virgil (illustration from The Divine Comedy) The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 28: Dante, Virgil, and Statius in the ancient forest of the terrestrial paradise - by Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) - Illustration by Gustave Dore (1832-1883) Purgatorio, Canto 33: Dante Drinks of the River Eunoe, Illustration from Purgatorio, Canto 16: Dante speaks to the soul of Marco Lombardo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Paradiso, Canto 3: The first realm: Piccarda Donati and the souls whose vows had been broken (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 23: Dante recognizes the shade of Forese Donati among the gluttons (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 4: Homer, the poets, and heroes in Limbo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 24: The gluttonous souls crying out beneath the tree (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) Inferno, Canto 10: Farinata degli Uberti addresses Dante (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) Purgatorio, Canto 4: The indolent souls beside the rock (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 10: The marble sculptures portraying pride (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 25: The Poets in the Seventh Circle, Illustration from "The Divine Comedy" by Dante Alighieri, 1885 Inferno, Canto 34: Virgil and Dante ascend to the upper world (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 1: The She-Wolf Appears, Illustration from Inferno, Canto 2: Beatrice and Virgil (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 23: The souls of the gluttonous (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 1: Dante in the savage wood (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) Inferno, Canto 19: Dante rebukes Pope Nicholas III Are you sure, That we are awake It seems to me That yet we sleep, we dream (illustration from Purgatorio, Canto 13: Sapia cleanses his guilty life (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 1: Virgil and Dante begin their journey (illustration from The Divine Comedy) The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 1: The poets behold the beauty of Venus in the morning sky - Illustration by Gustave Dore Illustration by Arthur Rackham for A Midsummer Night
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More art prints by Gustave Dore

Paradiso, Canto 31: The saintly throng form a rose in the empyrean The Divine Comedy, Paradiso, Canto 31: The saintly throng form a rose in the empyrean (rose celeste) - by Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) Camelot, illustration from Illustration for Milton Illustration from Edgar Allan Poe The Oceanids The Valley of Tears, 1883 The Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones, Ezekiel 37:1-2, Illustration from Dore Dante and the Eagle, from Destruction of Leviathan - Engraving in Inferno, Canto 1: Dante in the savage wood (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) The Darkness at the Crucifixion The Fall of the Rebel Angels, from Book I of The Divine Comedy, Paradiso, Canto 31: The saintly throng form a rose in the empyrean (rose celeste) - by Dante Alighieri Les Saltimbanques
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More art prints by Gustave Dore

Paradiso, Canto 31: The saintly throng form a rose in the empyrean The Divine Comedy, Paradiso, Canto 31: The saintly throng form a rose in the empyrean (rose celeste) - by Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) Camelot, illustration from Illustration for Milton Illustration from Edgar Allan Poe The Oceanids The Valley of Tears, 1883 The Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones, Ezekiel 37:1-2, Illustration from Dore Dante and the Eagle, from Destruction of Leviathan - Engraving in Inferno, Canto 1: Dante in the savage wood (illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri) The Darkness at the Crucifixion The Fall of the Rebel Angels, from Book I of The Divine Comedy, Paradiso, Canto 31: The saintly throng form a rose in the empyrean (rose celeste) - by Dante Alighieri Les Saltimbanques
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A selection of our top sellers

Pine Forest (Left Panel) Reduced Weight Alley in Arles with Houses Fish Blood Napoleon I Bonaparte studying at the Royal Military School of Brienne. Its shadow falls on the geographic map of Europe. Illustration by Jacques Marie Gaston Onfray de Breville dit JOB Pillars of Creation (NIRCam and MIRI Composite) The White and the Black A Kingfisher and a lotus Painting from the Tomb of the Diver from the Southern Cemetery at Paestum, 480-470 BC The Typewriter of Julio Antonio Mella, Mexico City, 1928 Vase of Flowers Waterlilies at Sunset Moon Rising Over the Sea Poppy Field, 1873 Among the Sierra Nevada, California
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+43 4257 29415
support@meisterdrucke.com
Mo-Do: 7:00 - 16:00 | Fr: 7:00 - 13:00

Still have questions?

Are you interested in an art print from our manufactory but still unsure? Do you need advice on choosing the medium or help with the order?

Our experts are happy to assist you.

+43 4257 29415
support@meisterdrucke.com
Mo-Do: 7:00 - 16:00 | Fr: 7:00 - 13:00


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Post.at DHL Express Quehenberger Cargoboard


               

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