(Redirected from Fontana del Tritone):''For the fountain in Malta, see
Triton Fountain (Malta).''
Bernini's
baroque 'Triton Fountain' (
Italian ''Fontana del Tritone'') is located in Piazza Barberini,
Rome, near the entrance to the
Palazzo Barberini (now housing the
Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica), which Bernini helped redesign for his patron Maffeo Barberini, who had become pope as
Urban VIII. It is a few blocks from
Borromini's
San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane. In the
fountain, which Bernini executed of
travertine in 1642–43, an over-lifesize muscular
Triton, a minor sea god of ancient Greco-Roman legend, is depicted as a
merman kneeling on an opened scallop shell. He throws back his head to raise a
conch to his lips: from it a jet of water spurts, formerly rising dramatically higher than it does today. The fountain has a base of four
dolphins
[1] that entwine the
papal tiara with crossed keys and the heraldic
Barberini bees in their scaly tails. The ''Tritone'', first of Bernini's fountains, was erected to provide water from the
Acqua Felice aqueduct, which Urban had restored, in a dramatic celebration. It was Bernini's last major commission from his great patron, who died in 1644.
At the Triton Fountain, Urban and Bernini brought a garden feature familiar from
villas decisively to a public, wholly urban setting for the first time. All the previous fountains of Rome had been passive basins for the reception of public water or had garden settings in the suburban villas.
The triumphant passage from
Ovid's ''
Metamorphoses'' book I, evoking godlike control over the waters and describing the draining away of the
Universal Deluge, which Urban set Bernini to illustrate, was well-known to all literate Roman contemporaries:
:''Already Triton, at his call, appears
:''Above the waves; a Tyrian robe he wears;
:''And in his hand a crooked trumpet bears.
:''The soveraign bids him peaceful sounds inspire,
:''And give the waves the signal to retire.
:''His writhen shell he takes; whose narrow vent
:''Grows by degrees into a large extent,
:''Then gives it breath; the blast with doubling sound,
:''Runs the wide circuit of the world around:
:''The sun first heard it, in his early east,
:''And met the rattling ecchos in the west.
:''The waters, list'ning to the trumpet's roar,
:''Obey the summons, and forsake the shore.
:::—free translation by Sir Samuel Garth, John Dryden, et al..
The Triton Fountain is one of those evoked in
Ottorino Respighi's ''
Fontane di Roma''. The legend applied to the
Trevi Fountain has been extended to this: that any visitor who throws a coin into the water will have guaranteed their return to Rome.
Two finished terracotta ''
bozzetti'' at the
Detroit Institute of Arts,
[2] securely attributed to Bernini, reflect his exploration of the fountain's themes of the intertwined upended dolphins and the muscular, scaly-tailed Triton.
Notes
1. The dolphins are represented in their heraldic conventionalization, not as they appear in nature.
2. Accession numbers 52.218 and 52.219.
External links
★
Web Gallery of Art: image and description
★
(Mary Anne Sullivan), photographs of the Triton Fountain
★
Bernini bozzetti: Detroit Institute of Art