
Wikimedia Commons • Public Domain
by Parmigianino
Italian artist Parmigianino painted this elegant Madonna and Child around 1524, demonstrating the refined Mannerist style that made him one of the most influential Italian artists of his generation. The Virgin holds the Christ child while an angel attends beside them, all three figures rendered with the elongated proportions and graceful poses that define Mannerism at its most sophisticated.
The painting showcases Parmigianino's mastery of soft sfumato modeling, blending tones to create faces of almost porcelain delicacy. His Madonna type became famous: impossibly elegant, with a long neck and tapering fingers, beautiful in a way that goes beyond natural observation. The sweet expressions avoid the emotional intensity found in High Renaissance prototypes, aiming instead at aesthetic refinement.
Parmigianino was still in his early twenties when he created this work, shortly before leaving Parma for Rome to further his career. His early death at thirty-seven cut short a brilliant trajectory, but paintings like this established conventions that artists would follow for decades. The work now belongs to the Städel Museum in Frankfurt, where it represents the elegant idealism of sixteenth-century Mannerism.
Other masterpieces from the Mannerism movement

Bronzino, 1545
National Gallery, London

Correggio, 1530
Parma Cathedral, Parma

Bronzino
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Florence

Bronzino
Royal Collection, London

Bronzino
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Florence

Bronzino
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Bronzino
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia

Bronzino
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Florence
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