Girolamo Fontanella | |||||
Birth Place: | Reggio Emilia, Papal States | ||||
Death Place: | Naples, Kingdom of Naples | ||||
Module: |
|
Girolamo Fontanella (pronounced as /it/; –) was an Italian Baroque poet.
Little is known of Girolamo Fontanella's short but active life until 1632, when his first book, L'Incendio rinovato del Vesuvio was printed in Naples. He was born probably in Reggio Emilia around 1612, but he spent most of his life in Naples.[1] He was a member of the Accademia degli Oziosi, and worked as poet for the Viceregal Court, as suggested by his sonnet dedicated to Fernando Afán de Ribera, Spanish ambassador to the Holy See from 1625 to 1626 and future Viceroy of Naples and Sicily.[2] Fontanella was a friend of the painter Artemisia Gentileschi, to whom he dedicated various poems.[3] He died in Naples between March 1643 and April 1644.
Fontanella is considered one of the best writers of pastoral verse of the 17th century. His poetry collection Ode (1633; second edition, revised and expanded, 1638) is influenced both by the conceptismo of Giambattista Marino and Guido Casoni and by the neoclassic poetry of Gabriello Chiabrera and Fulvio Testi. His Nove cieli (1646), regarded by Benedetto Croce as akin to D'Annunzio's Laudi, uses the conventions of conceptismo to create graceful miniature portraits, frequently incorporating moral dicta, while the Elegie (1645) turn to declamatory pathos. Many of his lyrics are included in Benedetto Croce's influential anthology of Baroque poetry.[4]