The Marriage of Heaven and Hell is one of Blake's most iconic works. Due to its provocative nature and its subtle theory on oppositions as an essential part of life, it has inspired poets, thinkers and artists.
Virtually forgotten in his time (but admired by creators such as Flaxman or Füsli), William Blake disconcerted generations of scholars who could not see in him more than an eccentric lost in the world of the unconscious. It will not be until well into the twentieth century that some scholars offer a new view of Blake. Although as an artist and as a man he was profoundly original, he was by no means a hallucinated alien to the surrounding reality; quite the contrary, he was a lucid critic of his time who pointed out many of his sinister traits. His ideological position was always clear and with his symbolic art he accused scourges such as slavery or the ruthless exploitat...read more