6. ‘Ex illo mea, mi Daniel, Victoria pendet’: A Forgotten Spiritual Epigram by Vittoria Colonna

2021 ◽  
pp. 135-152
Author(s):  
Veronica Copello
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Ita Mac Carthy

‘Grace’ emerges as a keyword in the culture and society of sixteenth-century Italy. This book explores how it conveys and connects the most pressing ethical, social and aesthetic concerns of an age concerned with the reactivation of ancient ideas in a changing world. The book reassesses artists such as Francesco del Cossa, Raphael, and Michelangelo and explores anew writers like Castiglione, Ariosto, Tullia d'Aragona, and Vittoria Colonna. It shows how these artists and writers put grace at the heart of their work. The book argues that grace came to be as contested as it was prized across a range of Renaissance Italian contexts. It characterised emerging styles in literature and the visual arts, shaped ideas about how best to behave at court and sparked controversy about social harmony and human salvation. For all these reasons, grace abounded in the Italian Renaissance, yet it remained hard to define. The book explores what grace meant to theologians, artists, writers, and philosophers, showing how it influenced their thinking about themselves, each other and the world. It portrays grace not as a stable formula of expression but as a web of interventions in culture and society.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vittoria Colonna
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Maratsos

The close friendship shared by Vittoria Colonna and Michelangelo inspired the production of intimate gifts in the form of sonnets and presentation drawings. These works exercised a considerable fascination over their contemporaries, who sought to obtain copies of the poems and drawings in a variety of different media. Both individually crafted and mass produced, these copies possessed multiple valences for different audiences, revealing the ways in which the relationship between original and copy, function and medium, collecting and devotion intersected in the Cinquecento. This chapter explores the ways in which sonnets and drawings were appropriated by broader audiences, focusing especially on the translation of Michelangelo’s Pietà drawing into bronze paxes created for popular, liturgical use.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramie Targoff

In the final years of her life, Vittoria Colonna developed a profound attachment to the English Catholic cardinal, Reginald Pole, who had formed a circle of reformers in the city of Viterbo where Colonna herself moved in 1541. This paper examines the epistolary exchange between Colonna and Pole with an aim of uncovering the nature of what Colonna repeatedly describes as her ‘extreme obligation’. The letters Colonna wrote both to Pole directly and to others in the Viterbo group about Pole reveal his role in her life as a Christ-like figure to whom she is both erotically and spiritually drawn.


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