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Detail from Madonna with Saint Jerome and Mary Magdalen (Il Giorno)
Antonio da Correggio·c. 1512
Historical Context
This detail from Correggio's Madonna with Saint Jerome and Mary Magdalen (Il Giorno) at the Middlesbrough Institute preserves a fragment of one of his most celebrated altarpieces. The original, now in Parma, is considered among the finest achievements of Italian Renaissance painting for its luminous color and emotional depth. Correggio's Madonna paintings are among the most technically accomplished devotional works of the Italian Renaissance, distinguished by the soft atmospheric modeling he absorbed from Leonardo and developed into something entirely personal. Working primarily in Parma, away from the major centers of Italian Renaissance culture, he developed an independent artistic language characterized by warm light, soft contours, and the specific quality of tender emotional intimacy that made his works enormously popular. His influence on subsequent European painting — particularly the Baroque emphasis on emotional accessibility and the Rococo celebration of sensuous beauty — was foundational, the tradition descending from him through Annibale Carracci to the entire seventeenth-century Italian tradition.
Technical Analysis
The fragment preserves Correggio's extraordinary luminous painting, with the warm golden light that earned the original its nickname "Il Giorno" (The Day). The soft modeling and rich color demonstrate his revolutionary handling of light.
Look Closer
- ◆The detail fragment preserves Correggio's characteristic sfumato at its most refined — transitions from light to shadow imperceptibly smooth.
- ◆The warm, golden light — seemingly emanating from the figures themselves rather than from an external source — is the hallmark of his style.
- ◆The fragment's edges show where the original composition continued, bare ground and abrupt tonal endings marking the severance.
- ◆Even in this extracted detail, Correggio's characteristic upward gaze is preserved — his figures always looking toward something higher.



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