Correggio(b Correggio, ?1489; d Correggio,
5 March 1534).
Italian painter and draughtsman. Apart from his Venetian contemporaries,
he was the most important northern Italian painter of the first half of
the 16th century. His best-known works are the illusionistic frescoes in
the domes of S Giovanni Evangelista and the cathedral in Parma, where he
worked from 1520 to 1530. The combination of technical virtuosity and
dramatic excitement in these works ensured their importance for later
generations of artists. His altarpieces of the same period are equally
original and ally intimacy of feeling with an ecstatic quality that
seems to anticipate the Baroque. In his paintings of mythological
subjects, especially those executed after his return to Correggio around
1530, he created images whose sensuality and abandon have been seen as
foreshadowing the Rococo. Vasari wrote that Correggio was timid and
virtuous, that family responsibilities made him miserly and that he died
from a fever after walking in the sun. He left no letters and, apart
from Vasari’s account, nothing is known of his character or personality
beyond what can be deduced from his works. The story that he owned a
manuscript of Bonaventura Berlinghieri’s Geographia, as well as
his use of a latinized form of Allegri (Laetus), and his naming of his
son after the humanist Pomponius Laetus, all suggest that he was an
educated man by the standards of painters in this period. The
intelligence of his paintings supports this claim. Relatively unknown in
his lifetime, Correggio was to have an enormous posthumous reputation.
He was revered by Federico Barocci and the Carracci, and throughout the
17th and 18th centuries his reputation rivalled that of Raphael.