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Vision of the Deity
Vision of the Deity (1824-27) © Ashmolean
   


 

Paradise, Canto 28

In Paradise Beatrice has replaced Virgil as Dante's guide. They are now close to God, and so nearly at the end of their journey.

This picture shows the angels arranged in concentric circles of light around the deity. Beatrice explains to Dante that the closer to God they stand, the brighter and the more powerful they are. God at the center is depicted as a bearded old man resembling Urizen. The angels (somewhat like the staff in the hierarchy of a Japanese company) grow older as they get closer to God, although immediately beside Him are the younger Cherubim and Seraphim.

Blake died while working on this commission, so this picture, which comes from the end of Dante's trilogy, remains an unfinished sketch. The loss is less than it might be since Blake (like Gustave Dore and other artists who have illustrated Dante) found that Purgatory and Paradise offer much less interesting subject matter than Hell with all its perverse and bizarre punishments.

 
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