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Allegory of Virtue by Antonio da Correggio

Allegory of Virtue

Antonio da Correggio·c. 1512

Historical Context

This Allegory of Virtue at The New Art Gallery Walsall is connected to Correggio's allegorical compositions painted for Isabella d'Este's studiolo in Mantua. These sophisticated allegorical programs demonstrated the humanist learning of their patron and challenged artists to create compelling visual embodiments of abstract concepts. Antonio da Correggio, working in Parma in the early sixteenth century, was among the most original and influential Italian painters of the High Renaissance. His soft atmospheric modeling (learned from Leonardo), his dynamic compositions designed for ceiling decoration (anticipating the Baroque), and his warm, sensuous approach to both sacred and mythological subjects made him a decisive figure in the transmission of Italian Renaissance painting toward the Baroque. Vasari, who never visited Parma, may have underestimated his significance; later critics, beginning with Bellori, recognized him as one of the foundational figures of the entire European painting tradition after Raphael.

Technical Analysis

The allegorical figure is rendered with Correggio's characteristic soft modeling and warm palette. The composition balances symbolic attributes with naturalistic figure painting.

Look Closer

  • ◆Correggio's figure of Virtue is one of his most graceful allegorical creations — the soft contraposto of the standing figure, the flowing drapery, the upward gaze — all defining his vision of ideal feminine beauty.
  • ◆The allegorical companion figures flanking Virtue are specifically characterized through their attributes — books, armor, or implements appropriate to the scholarly or martial virtues Isabella d'Este was celebrating.
  • ◆The soft sfumato that Correggio derived from Leonardo's teaching gives the figures' skin a luminous depth quite different from the harder-edged Venetian or Roman styles of his contemporaries.
  • ◆The landscape background dissolves in the Correggiesque atmospheric haze that was his distinctive contribution to North Italian painting — softer and more vaporous than anything in the Venetian or Florentine tradition.

See It In Person

The New Art Gallery Walsall

Walsall, United Kingdom

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
138 × 88 cm
Era
High Renaissance
Style
High Renaissance
Genre
Mythology
Location
The New Art Gallery Walsall, Walsall
View on museum website →

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Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist by Antonio da Correggio

Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist

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Penitent Magdalene by Antonio da Correggio

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Antonio da Correggio·1611

Lesender Amor (Nachfolger) by Antonio da Correggio

Lesender Amor (Nachfolger)

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