Innovative playwright spotted the potential of Palladio
Vincenzo Catena's portrait of the dramatist Gian Giorgio Trissino |
As well as his contribution to Italian culture, Trissino is remembered for educating and helping Andrea di Pietro della Gondola, a young mason he discovered working on his villa in Cricoli, just outside Vicenza.
He took the young man on two visits to Rome that profoundly influenced his development into a great architect and he gave him the name Palladio, after the Greek goddess of wisdom, Pallas Athene.
Trissino had been born into a wealthy family and was able to travel widely, studying Greek in Milan and philosophy in Ferrara. He was part of Niccolò Machiavelli’s literary circle in Florence before he settled in Rome, where he associated with the humanist and poet, Pietro Bembo. He became a close friend of the dramatist, Giovanni Rucella, and served Popes Leo X and Clement VII.
Trissino’s most important dramatic work was the blank verse tragedy Sofonisba, published in 1524 and first performed in 1562.
Andrea Palladio was Gian Giorgio Tressino's protégé |
Trissino later wrote a verse comedy based on a work by the Roman playwright Plautus. He wrote the first Italian odes modelled on the verse of the Greek poet, Pindar, and the first Italian versions of the Horatian ode.
Trissino died in Rome in 1550. An edition of his collected works was published in Verona in 1729.
Vicenza's Piazza dei Signori |
Vicenza, where Gian Giorgio Trissoni was born, has become known as the city of his protégé, Andrea Palladio, and the buildings the great architect designed are all around the city. There is a statue of Palladio close to Piazza dei Signori, the main square. Palazzo del Valmarana and Loggia del Capitaniato are examples of his work that can be seen close to the centre.
Andrea Palladio worked as a stonemason on the Villa Trissoni, which can be found at Cricoli, near Vicenza |
The Villa Trissoni is located at Cricoli, just outside the centre of Vicenza. Most of it was built in the 16th century and it is associated with Andrea Palladio, who worked on it as a mason. Since 1994 the villa has been part of a World Heritage Site designated to protect the Palladian buildings of Vicenza. Gian Giorgio Trissoni was personally responsible for organising the remodelling of the villa at Cricoli, which he had inherited from his father.
Read more:
Andrea Palladio - the world's famous architect
The poet who was Lucrezia Borgia's lover
Leo X - visionary Renaissance pope
More reading:
1593: The birth of painter Artemisia Gentileschi
1822: The death of the English poet Shelley
1918: American author Ernest Hemingway injured by Austrian mortar fire in the Veneto
Home