Gerardo Diego (born Oct. 3, 1896, Santander, Spain—died July 8, 1987, Madrid) was a Spanish musicologist and a prolific, innovative poet.
Diego received a doctorate from the University of Madrid in 1920. During the 1920s he wrote experimental poetry and joined the avant-garde Ultraísmo and Creacionismo movements. He taught for a time in the ancient town of Soria in north-central Spain; the location inspired the poems of Imagen (1922), Soria (1923), and Versos humanos (1925; “Human Verses”). In Vía crucis (1931; “Way of the Cross”) Diego explored religious themes. Angeles de Compostela (1940; rev. ed., 1961), which also contains religious poetry, and Alondra de verdad (1941; “Lark of Truth”), a diary in 42 sonnets, have been called his best work; both collections are relatively traditional and classical in tone.
From 1939 to 1966 Diego was a professor at the Beatriz Galindo Institute in Madrid, where he continued to produce new poems at a rapid rate. Paisaje con figuras (1956; “Landscape with Figures”) won the second of his national literary awards, and in 1979 he shared the Cervantes Prize with Jorge Luis Borges.