Ten Depictions of Hell
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In depicting the place where, in many religious traditions, the spirits of the damned reside and are punished, artists have found inspiration from religious texts, sermons, literature, mythology, or their own imaginations. A whole lot of artists were inspired by Dante’s chilling Inferno, the first section of the The Divine Comedy (c. 1308–21). While Dante outlines the nine circles of hell in his epic poem, here we have 10 depictions of the netherworld. They illustrate scenes of torture, sneering demons, and other endless horrors that await the person who strays from the path toward heaven.
The Last Judgment (1307) by Giotto
Giotto is best known for the fresco cycles he painted for the Arena Chapel in Padua, Italy, depicting scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary and of Jesus. His largest contribution to that space, however, is The Last Judgment, which covers the entire west wall. Influenced by Christian eschatology, Giotto creates a contrast between the blessed on the lower left side, who are ushered toward heaven by kindly angels, and the damned on the lower right, who are tormented by demons in hell. Satan, at the center of hell, is depicted as a large blue figure with horns and a furry face. He seemingly gobbles human figures while also excreting them. Interestingly, Giotto also paints usurers—sinners who lend money at interest—as having money bags tied around their necks, a penalty described by Dante in the Inferno, which he was writing at that very time.
Mouth of Hell (c. 1440) from The Hours of Catherine of Cleves
Catherine of Cleves was a fairly obscure historical duchess, but the book of hours, a popular type of prayer book during the Middle Ages, that she commissioned in the mid-15th century is now regarded as the greatest Dutch illuminated manuscript. One of the most famous illustrations from the manuscript is a full-page depiction of the mouth of hell. It appears on the verso (left) page alongside Final Absolution on the recto (right) in the Office of the Dead, prayers at the end of every book of hours for the reader’s deceased friends or family members. In the Mouth of Hell, the entrance to the netherworld is literally a mouth—indeed, two mouths of lionlike creatures, one within the other. Inside these mouths is a fiery furnace or cauldron, into which nearby demons push the damned. One winged goblin tugs at a shackled group of souls while another pushes a wheelbarrow full of them toward the entrance. A castle decorated with skulls, mutilated human figures, and several winged demons completes this representation of common medieval fears of hell.
The Crucifixion and The Last Judgment (c. 1436–38) by Jan van Eyck
In this diptych, Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck depicts the Crucifixion on the left panel and the Last Judgment on the right. The latter, like Giotto’s fresco of the same theme, contrasts the treatment of the blessed, who levitate toward heaven and are guided by benevolent angels at the top of the painting, to the treatment of the damned, who thrash and churn underground at the bottom. A ghastly skeleton hovers over the lower scene as serpentine creatures strangle sinners and fanged demons tear at their flesh. Ouch!
The Map of Hell (c. 1480–1490) by Sandro Botticelli
He may have created blissful paintings of the Birth of Venus and Spring, but Sandro Botticelli also spent years illustrating each of the 100 cantos in Dante’s The Divine Comedy. In addition, he drew The Map of Hell, perhaps the most disquieting of such illustrations. Here, hell is depicted as a funnel comprising nine major levels, each corresponding to one of Dante’s circles. Within each stratum, tiny sinners are trapped, but, due to their diminutive size, their punishments are hard to discern. Indeed, unlike other depictions of hell, the punishments are not the most terrifying aspect of the work. Rather, it’s the dread Botticelli manages to evoke through the eerie shape of hell and the suffocating blank abyss in which it is situated, all of which suggests an enduring claustrophobia.
The Garden of Earthly Delights (c. 1490–1500) by Hiëronymus Bosch
Hiëronymus Bosch’s most famous work comprises three scenes: on the left panel, Bosch depicts God introducing Eve to Adam; in the center, he paints swarms of humans taking part in ephemeral pleasures within a deceptive paradise; and, on the right, he portrays sinners being tortured in hell. In the latter, each of the punishments for the seven deadly sins is depicted. Immersion in freezing water, for example, is meted out to the envious. Meanwhile, enormous musical instruments are used as torture devices while strange creatures devour humans whole.
The Last Judgment (1536–41) by Michelangelo
Like Giotto, Michelangelo painted an enormous scene of the Last Judgment on the west wall of the chapel he was commissioned to decorate. In this case, the commission was for the Sistine Chapel, more than 20 years after he finished painting the ceiling. Christ floats at the center of the fresco, lifting an arm to save those on his right and dropping the other arm to damn those on his left. The saved souls rise slowly through the heavy air, as the damned ones sink. Symbols, such as a money bag that weighs an individual down, suggest each damned soul’s sin—in this case, probably greed. Michelangelo’s own face is depicted on the loose skin held by St. Bartholomew, who, according to tradition, himself had been flayed alive. The skin also recalls the flaying of Marsyas by the Greek god Apollo, who punished the mortal for his hubris in believing that his skill surpassed that of a god. Scholars have speculated that, in this identification, Michelangelo may be acknowledging his own sins. Meanwhile, at the lower right, Charon ferries souls across the River Styx, a pagan motif that Dante had used in the Inferno.
Mad Meg (1561) by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
In the 16th century Dulle Griet (“Mad Meg”) was a Flemish term used to describe a woman who was disagreeable, argued with her husband, and was generally seen as too domineering. It is based on the proverb “She could plunder in front of hell and return unscathed.” Pieter Bruegel the Elder, a master of portraying abstract proverbs, paints such a woman here. Wearing a breastplate and some kind of helmet, she strides toward the mouth of hell, depicted as—what else?—a giant mouth, in the middle ground toward the left. Confusingly, the fiery landscape of earth appears to be the actual hell. It is populated by strange creatures and buildings that engage in a busyness recalling Bosch’s hell. The work has many conflicting interpretations. Some experts argue that it is a feminist scene, and others assert that it is a painting of misogyny.
The Fallen Angels Entering Pandemonium from Paradise Lost, Book 1 (date unknown; exhibited in 1841)
In the epic poem Paradise Lost (originally issued in 10 books in 1667), English author John Milton tells the biblical story of the fall from grace of Adam and Eve (and, by extension, all humanity). In Book 1, he created the name Pandemonium for the capital of hell, which was built by fallen angels. In this 19th-century oil painting, which was formerly attributed to English artist John Martin, the depiction of hell focuses on the psychological horror of the place more than on the physical torture previously seen in art. Here Pandemonium is represented as a domed citadel, faintly lit by eerie lampposts. It stands atop a craggy landscape with rivers of fiery lava. Winged demons soar in the stormy sky and gather in the foreground. What could they be talking about?
Dante and Virgil in Hell (1850) by William-Adolphe Bouguereau
In yet another painting inspired by the Inferno, French painter William-Adolphe Bouguereau shows the lasting impression that Dante’s evocative descriptions of hell have had on artists’ understanding of the afterlife. Here Bouguereau depicts a scene from the eighth circle of hell, Fraud. At the center, two naked men fight each other. One, identified as Gianni Schicchi, who was sent to hell for impersonating a recently deceased Florentine aristocrat, has a greenish tint to his skin, and the other, Capocchio, was a known heretic and alchemist. Schicchi has thrust Capocchio to his knees and gnaws at his throat. Dante’s guide, Virgil, on the left in a white robe, draws his hand over his mouth, seemingly in horror, as Dante in a red cap, lays a hand on Virgil’s arm, perhaps seeking reassurance. In the background, a winged demon grins at their dismay. Bouguereau’s characteristic depictions of cherubic children and angelic women certainly have no place here!
Scattered Deformities in the End (2007) by Fuyuko Matsui
Fuyuko Matsui’s art is inspired by Japanese history, society, and tradition. Her painting Scattered Deformities in the End, for example, uses a traditional method of the Nihonga style, employing powdered mineral pigments on silk. The subject, a ghostly nude woman running through an eerie wood, recalls the ghost paintings that were produced in Japan beginning in the 15th century. Ghost paintings often portrayed women unable to attain Buddhahood because of some grievance, and this woman appears to be in a similar state of eternal uncertainty. She seems to be fleeing from a flock of birds that tear her dark hair and pull her skin while a dog bites her ankle. Her back is split open, exposing her muscles and bones. Because the work is based in Japanese culture and Buddhism, it deviates from other representations of hell and their emphasis on punishment in a fiery pit, leaving viewers wondering what void the woman inhabits and why she is being tortured. The painting is haunting for its uncertainty.