Lazarides Gallery London, Hell’s Half Acre (October 12-17, 2010)
“Dante: no other medieval author continues to exert such an extraordinary force on the modern imagination. Those who’ve read his Comedìa never recover; those who’ve never read him still feel like they know the Inferno, and because it has become such a cultural norm, they probably do know it. […]
“Recently, the Lazarides Gallery in London held an exhibition (suggestively) entitled Hell’s Half Acre in which sixteen artists produced work evoking Dante’s Inferno in The Old Vic Tunnels, under Waterloo Station. The setting is an important aspect of this exhibition. You enter and descend into a dark series of cavernous spaces in which artworks are lit by spotlights, passing a projection of a barking dog on the way. Curiously, this not on the list of works exhibited: perhaps no-one wanted to own up to such creature. Your eyes take some time to become accustomed to the low light – I nearly fell over in my first five minutes, adding to my disorientation and considerably heightening the effect! Steve Lazarides is a name often associated with Banksy though he represents over thirty contemporary artists and his vision in putting together this exhibition in this particular space is remarkable. This short review will no do justice to the richness of the exhibition.[…]” –Miglior Acque, October 22, 2010
Contributed by Patrick Molloy
Sighting Citation:
“Lazarides Gallery London, Hell’s Half Acre (October 12-17, 2010).” Dante Today: Citings and Sightings of Dante’s Works in Contemporary Culture. Elizabeth Coggeshall and Arielle Saiber, eds. November 17, 2010. https://www.dantetoday.org/sightings/lazarides-gallery-london-hells-half-acre-october-12-17-2010/.