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Christ the Redeemer
Antonio da Correggio·1527
Historical Context
Christ the Redeemer from 1527 at the Pinacoteca Vaticana shows Correggio painting the salvific image of Christ for the papal collection. The Salvator Mundi type, showing Christ blessing while holding the globe, was a fundamental devotional image that Correggio invested with his characteristic warmth and humanity. 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 frontal composition presents Christ in a hieratic pose softened by Correggio's gentle sfumato. The warm flesh tones and compassionate expression transform the formal devotional type into an image of approachable divinity.
Look Closer
- ◆Christ raises his right hand in the Benedictus gesture — three fingers extended in the priest's blessing, a formal theological sign.
- ◆The globe in Christ's left hand represents world sovereignty — the Salvator Mundi type's universal claim made portable.
- ◆Correggio's characteristic warm light falls from an implied upper source, giving the Redeemer's face its characteristic luminous gentleness.
- ◆Christ's eyes are directed slightly downward and outward — not the all-seeing divine gaze but the compassionate look of someone attending to a specific person.
- ◆The garment's folds are painted in warm shadow and cool highlight — Correggio's mastery of drapery as both formal pattern and theological garment.



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