
High Renaissance painter Antonio Allegri da Correggio (c. 1489-1534) pioneered illusionistic ceiling painting that anticipated the Baroque by a century. Named for his birthplace near Parma, he trained locally before absorbing influences from Mantegna's precise draftsmanship and Leonardo's soft sfumato. Unlike the great artists of Rome and Florence, Correggio spent his career in provincial Parma, yet his innovations proved profoundly influential.
His ceiling frescoes transformed how artists depicted heavenly visions. The Camera di San Paolo (1519) in Parma's convent features an arbor with glimpses of playful cherubs through painted openings. The Vision of St. John on Patmos (1520-21) in San Giovanni Evangelista floats Christ in clouds above the worshipper. His masterpiece, the Assumption of the Virgin (c. 1526-30) in Parma Cathedral, creates the illusion of the dome opening to heaven, with swirling angels and saints in dramatic foreshortening. One contemporary dismissively called it a "ragout of frogs' legs," but the technique revolutionized ceiling decoration. His mythological paintings for the Duke of Mantua display equally sensuous handling. Jupiter and Io shows the god as an embracing cloud. Correggio married in 1519 and had a son, Pomponio, who became a painter of modest talent. He died at 45, but his influence extended through Annibale Carracci to the great Baroque ceiling painters. Works hang at the Louvre, the National Gallery London, and the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna.
17 paintings catalogued with museum locations

Correggio
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Correggio
National Gallery, London

Correggio, 1531
Borghese Gallery, Rome, Rome

Correggio
Convent of San Paolo, Parma, Parma

Correggio
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Florence

Correggio
Private Collection, Unknown

Correggio
National Gallery, London

Correggio
Private Collection, Unknown

Correggio
State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg

Correggio
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Correggio
Museo del Prado, Madrid, Madrid

Correggio
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Florence
Correggio
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, Strasbourg

Correggio
Convent of San Paolo, Parma, Parma

Correggio
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Correggio, 1530
Parma Cathedral, Parma
Correggio
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan
12 museums display Correggio's works. Click any museum to see visiting info and the specific works they hold.


Unknown, Unknown
2 works on display

New York, USA
1 work on display


London, UK
2 works on display

St. Petersburg, Russia
1 work on display

Madrid, Spain
1 work on display


Florence, Italy
2 works on display

Vienna, Austria
1 work on display

Rome, Italy
1 work on display

Milan, Italy
2 works on display


Parma, Italy
2 works on display
Strasbourg, France
1 work on display

Parma, Italy
1 work on display
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