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Correggio

Drawings

Farewell Christ from Mary

Adoration of the Magi


Adoration of the Magi , detail


Adoration of the Shepherds ( The Night )


Adoration of the Shepherds ( The Night ) , detail


Adoration of the Shepherds ( The Night ) , detail


Nativity

Danae


Ceiling fresco in San Paolo in Parma


Ceiling fresco in San Paolo in Parma: Bound Juno


Ceiling fresco in San Paolo in Parma: Three Graces


Ceiling fresco in San Paolo in Parma , detail


Ceiling fresco in San Paolo in Parma , detail


The Education of Cupid , detail


Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine of Alexandria


The Gypsy Madonna


Dome fresco in Parma : Vision of St. John , overview


Dome fresco in Parma : Vision of St. John , detail


Dome fresco in Parma : Vision of St. John , detail


Dome fresco in Parma : Vision of St. John , detail


Dome fresco in Parma : Vision of St. John , detail


Vault fresco in Parma : St. Lucas and St. Ambrose


Vault fresco in Parma: Coronation of the Virgin


Vault fresco in Parma: St. John the Evangelist


Wall fresco in San Paolo in Parma: Diana in the car

Ganymede


St. Catherine of Alexandria

Io

Jupiter and Antiope


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation, Overview


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation , detail


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation , detail


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation , detail


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation , detail


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation , detail


Dome fresco in Parma: Annunciation , detail


Vices allegory


Leda and the Swan


Madonna Campori


Madonna della Scala


Madonna della Scodella , detail


Madonna della Scodella , detail


Madonna of St. George


Madonna of St. Jerome ( The Day )


Madonna of St. Jerome ( The Day ) , detail


Madonna of St. Jerome ( The Day ) , detail


Madonna with John the Baptist


Madonna with John the Baptist


Madonna with angels


Mary, worshiping the Child


Maria with basket


Martyrdom of Four Saints


Martyrdom of Four Saints, detail


Martyrdom of Four Saints, detail


Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine


Noli me tangere


Noli me tangere , Detail: St. Mary Magdalene


Portrait of a man


Rest on the Flight to Egypt


Rest on the Flight to Egypt , detail


Venus, Mercury and Cupid


Annunciation


Four Saints


Drawings

Apostles and Putti in the clouds


Head of a Woman


Annunciation

Antonio Allegri da Correggio (August 1489 – March 5, 1534), usually known as Correggio, was the foremost painter of the Parma school of the Italian Renaissance, who was responsible for some of the most vigorous and sensuous works of the 16th century. In his use of dynamic composition, illusionistic perspective and dramatic foreshortening, Correggio prefigured the Rococo art of the 18th century.

Biography

Antonio Allegri was born in Correggio, Italy, a small town near Reggio Emilia. His date of birth is uncertain (around 1489). His father was a merchant. Otherwise, little is known about Correggio's life or training. In the years 1503-1505 he apprenticed to Francesco Bianchi Ferrara of Modena. Here he probably knew the classicism of artists like Lorenzo Costa and Francesco Francia, evidence of which can be found in his first works. After a trip to Mantua in 1506, he returned to Correggio, where he stayed until 1510. To this period is assigned the Adoration of the Child with St. Elizabeth and John, which shows clear influences from Costa and Mantegna. In 1514 he probably finished three tondos for the entrance of the church of Sant'Andrea in Mantua, and then returned to Correggio: here, as an independent and increasingly renowned artist, he signed a contract for the Madonna altarpiece in the local monastery of St. Francis (now in the Dresden Gemäldegalerie).

Works in Parma
Jupiter and Io (c. 1531) typifies the unabashed eroticism, radiance, and cool, pearly colors associated with Correggio's best work.

By 1516, Correggio was in Parma, where he generally remained for the rest of his career. Here, he befriended Michelangelo Anselmi, a prominent Mannerist painter. In 1519 he married Girolama Francesca di Braghetis, also of Correggio, who died in 1529. One of his sons, Pomponio Allegri, became an undistinguished painter. From this period are the Madonna and Child with the Young Saint John, Christ Leaving His Mother and the lost Madonna of Albinea.

Correggio's first major commission (February–September of 1519) was the ceiling decoration of the private dining salon of the mother-superior (abbess Giovanna Piacenza) of the convent of St Paul called the Camera di San Paolo at Parma. Here he painted a delightful arbor pierced by oculi opening to glimpses of playful cherubs. Below the oculi are lunettes with images of feigned monochromic marble. The fireplace is frescoed with an image of Diana. The iconography of the unit is complex, joining images of classical marbles to whimsical colorful bambini. While it recalls the secular frescoes of the pleasure palace of the Villa Farnesina in Rome, it is also a strikingly novel form of interior decoration.

He next painted the illusionistic Vision of St. John on Patmos (1520–21) for the dome of the church of San Giovanni Evangelista. Three years later he decorated the dome of the Cathedral of Parma with a startling Assumption of the Virgin, crowded with layers of receding figures in Melozzo's perspective (sotto in su, from down to up). These two works represented a highly novel illusionistic sotto in su treatment of dome decoration that would exert a profound influence upon future fresco artists, from Carlo Cignani in his fresco Assumption of the Virgin, in the cathedral church of Forlì, to Gaudenzio Ferrari in his frescoes for the cupola of Santa Maria dei Miracoli in Saronno, to Pordenone in his now-lost fresco from Treviso, and to the baroque elaborations of Lanfranco and Baciccio in Roman churches. The massing of spectators in a vortex, creating both narrative and decoration, the illusionistic obliteration of the architectural roof-plane, and the thrusting perspective towards divine infinity, were devices without precedent, and which depended on the extrapolation of the mechanics of perspective. The recession and movement implied by the figures all presage the dynamism that would characterize baroque painting.

Other masterpieces include The Lamentation and The Martyrdom of Four Saints [1], both at the Galleria Nazionale of Parma. The Lamentation is haunted by a lambence rarely seen in Italian painting prior to this time. The Martyrdom is also remarkable for resembling later Baroque compositions such as Bernini's Truth and Ercole Ferrata's Death of Saint Agnes, showing a gleeful saint entering martyrdom.
[edit] Mythological series based on Ovid's Metamorphoses
Ganymede Abducted by the Eagle, one of the four mythological paintings commissioned by Federico II Gonzaga, is a proto-Baroque work due to its depiction of movement, drama, and diagonal compositional arrangement.

Aside from his religious output, Correggio conceived a now-famous set of paintings depicting the Loves of Jupiter as described in Ovid's Metamorphoses. The voluptuous series was commissioned by Federico II Gonzaga of Mantua, probably to decorate his private Ovid Room in the Palazzo Te. However, they were given to the visiting Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and thus left Italy within years of their completion.

Leda and the Swan, now in Staatliche Museen of Berlin, is a tumult of incidents: in the centre Leda straddles a swan, and on the right, a shy but satisfied maiden. Danaë, now in Rome's Borghese Gallery, depicts the maiden as she is impregnated by a curtain of gilded divine rain. Her lower torso semi-obscured by sheets, Danae appears more demure and gleeful than Titian's 1545 version of the same topic, where the rain is more accurately numismatic. The picture once called Antiope and the Satyr is now correctly identified as Venus and Cupid with a Satyr.

Ganymede Abducted by the Eagle depicts the young man aloft in literal amorous flight. Some have interpreted the conjunction of man and eagle as a metaphor for the evangelist John; however, given the erotic context of this and other paintings, this seems unlikely. This painting and its partner, the masterpiece of Jupiter and Io (reproduced above), are in Kunsthistorisches Museum of Vienna.

Evaluation
Correggio's famous frescoes in Parma seems to melt the ceiling of the cathedral and draw the viewer into a gyre of spiritual ecstasy.

Correggio was remembered by his contemporaries as a shadowy, melancholic and introverted character, traits possibly conditioned by his birth into a large and poor family.

Correggio is an enigmatic and eclectic artist, and it is not always possible to identify a stylistic link between his paintings. He appears to have emerged out of no major apprenticeship, and to have had little immediate influence in terms of apprenticed successors, but his works are now considered to have been revolutionary and influential on subsequent artists. A half-century after his death Correggio's work was well known to Vasari, who felt that he had not had enough "Roman" exposure to make him a better painter. In the 18th and 19th centuries, his works were often remembered in the diaries of foreign visitors to Italy, which led to a reevaluation of his art during the period of Romanticism. The flight of the Madonna in the vault of the cupola of the Cathedral of Parma inspired numerous scenographical decorations in lay and religious palaces during those centuries.

Corregio's illusionistic experiments, in which imaginary spaces replace the natural reality, seem to prefigure many elements of Mannerist and Baroque stylistic approaches. In other words, he appears to have fostered artistic grandchildren, despite having no direct disciples outside of Parma, where he was influential on the work of Giovanni Maria Francesco Rondani, Parmigianino, Bernardo Gatti, and Giorgio Gandini del Grano. His son, Pomponio Allegri became a painter.
The Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine (c. 1520), Correggio's most important contribution to the High Renaissance art, exhibits Leonardo's pronounced influence on his early style.

In addition to the influence of Costa, there are echoes of Mantegna's style in his work, and a response to Leonardo da Vinci, as well.
Detail of Correggio's frescoes in the Camera di San Paolo.

Selected works

* Judith and the Servant (around 1510) Oil on canvas - Musée des Beaux-Arts, Strasbourg
* The Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine (1510–15) - National Gallery of Art, Washington
* Madonna (1512–14) - Oil canvas, Castello Sforzesco, Milan
* Madonna with St. Francis (1514) - Oil on wood, 299 x 245 cm, Gemäldegalerie, Dresden
* Madonna of Albinea (1514, lost)
* Madonna and Child with the Young Saint John (1516) - Oil canvas, 48 x 37 cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
* The Adoration of the Magi (1516–18)- Oil canvas, 84 x 108 cm, Brera, Milan
* Virgin and Child with an Angel (Madonna del Latte) (date unknown) - Oil on wood, 68 x 56 cm, Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest
* The Rest on the Flight to Egypt with Saint Francis (1517) - Oil on canvas, 123,5 x 106,5 cm, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
* Portrait of a Gentlewoman (1517–19) - Oil on canvas, 103 x 87,5 cm, Hermitage, St. Petersburg
* Adoration of the Child (1518–20) - Oil on canvas, 81 x 67 cm, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
* Camera di San Paolo (1519) - Frescoes, Nunnery of St Paul, Parma
* Passing Away of St. John (1520–24) - Fresco, S. Giovanni Evangelista, Parma
* Madonna della Scala (c. 1523) - Fresco, 196 x 141,8 cm, Galleria Nazionale, Parma
* Deposition from the Cross (1525)- Oil canvas, 158,5 x 184,3 cm, Galleria Nazionale, Parma
* Noli me Tangere (c. 1525) - Oil canvas, 130 x 103 cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
* Ecce Homo (1525–30) - Oil canvas, National Gallery, London
* Madonna della Scodella (1525–30) - Oil canvas, 216 x 137 cm, Galleria Nazionale, Parma
* Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine (1526–27) - Wood, 105 x 102 cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris
* Assumption of the Virgin (1526–1530) — Fresco, 1093 x 1195 cm, Cathedral of Parma
* Madonna of St. Jerome (1527–28) - Oil on canvas, 205,7 x 141 cm, Galleria Nazionale, Parma
* The Education of Cupid (c. 1528) - Oil canvas, 155 x 91 cm, National Gallery, London
* Venus and Cupid with a Satyr (c. 1528) - Oil on canvas, 188 x 125 cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris
* Nativity (Adoration of the Shepherds, or Holy Night (1528–30) - Oil on canvas, 256,5 x 188 cm, Gemäldegalerie, Dresden
* Madonna with St. George (1530–32) - Oil on canvas, 285 x 190 cm, Gemäldegalerie, Dresden
* Danaë (c. 1531) - Tempera panel, 161 x 193 cm, Galleria Borghese, Rome
* Ganymede abducted by the Eagle (1531–32) - Oil on canvas, 163,5 x 70,5 cm, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
* Jupiter and Io (1531–32) - Oil canvas, 164 x 71 cm, Kunsthistorisches Museum
* Leda with the Swan (1531–32) - Oil canvas, 152 x 191 cm, Staatliche Museen, Berlin
* Allegory of Virtue (c. 1532-1534) - Oil canvas, 149 x 88 cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris

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