
Pietà
Antonio da Correggio·1512
Historical Context
This Pietà from around 1512 at the Civic Museum in Correggio, the artist's hometown, represents his early engagement with the most emotionally demanding subject in Christian art. Even at this early stage, Correggio shows an instinct for tender pathos that would distinguish his mature sacred paintings. 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 composition presents the dead Christ mourned by the Virgin with restrained emotional intensity. Correggio's early handling shows the beginnings of his characteristic soft modeling and warm tonal harmonies.
Look Closer
- ◆The Virgin's grief is conveyed through downcast eyes and a slight tilt of the head — Correggio avoids theatrical weeping in favor of internalized sorrow.
- ◆Christ's pale body is modeled with the soft, sfumato transitions that Correggio would develop into his mature signature technique.
- ◆Angels or mourning figures surrounding the Pietà are rendered with the graceful contrapposto of classical sculpture.
- ◆The landscape background, though subordinate, shows Correggio's early interest in misty atmospheric recession.


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