
Head of Christ
Antonio da Correggio·1518
Historical Context
Head of Christ by Correggio (Antonio Allegri), painted around 1518, reflects the Emilian master's early engagement with devotional subjects. Correggio, who worked primarily in Parma and its environs, developed a uniquely tender and luminous style that bridged the High Renaissance and early Baroque, influencing artists from the Carracci to Boucher. Characteristic of the artist's mature approach, the work displays soft, blended sfumato creating an unprecedented sensuous warmth, vertiginous illusionistic ceiling frescoes, graceful figures with downcast expressions, proto-Baroque dynamism.
Technical Analysis
The soft sfumato modeling and warm, luminous flesh tones demonstrate Correggio's characteristic technique, creating an image of divine gentleness through the subtle interplay of light and shadow.



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