词条 | Parmigianino |
释义 | Parmigianino Italian artist byname of Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola, Mazzola also spelled Mazzuoli born Jan. 11, 1503, Parma, duchy of Milan 【Italy】 died Aug. 24, 1540, Casalmaggiore, Cremona ![]() There is no doubt that Correggio was the strongest single influence on Parmigianino's early development, but Parmigianino probably was never his pupil. The influence is apparent in Parmigianino's first important work, the Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine (c. 1521). About 1522–23 he executed two series of frescoes: one series, in two side chapels of S. Giovanni Evangelista, in Parma, was executed contemporaneously with Correggio's great murals on the dome and pendentives of that church, and the other, representing the Legend of Diana and Actaeon, was executed on the ceiling of a room in the Rocca Sanvitale at Fontanellato just outside Parma. The scheme of the latter decoration recalls Correggio's work in the Camera di San Paolo in Parma. ![]() Parmigianino was one of the most remarkable portrait painters of the century outside Venice. Some of his best portraits are in Naples, in the National Museum and Gallery of Capodimonte, including the Gian Galeazzo Sanvitale (1524) and the portrait of a young woman called Antea (c. 1535–37). The style that he developed was, in its suave attenuations and technical virtuosity, one of the most brilliant and influential manifestations of Mannerism. It was an extreme development of Raphael's late manner and opposed the naturalistic basis inherent in High Renaissance art. Parmigianino's works are distinguished by ambiguity of spatial composition, by distortion and elongation of the human figure, and by the pursuit of what the art historian Giorgio Vasari called “grace”; that is to say, a rhythmical, sensuous beauty beyond the beauty of nature. This last quality of attenuated elegance is evident not only in Parmigianino's paintings but also in his numerous and sensitive drawings. One of the first Italian artists to practice etching, Parmigianino used the etching needle with the freedom of a pen, usually to reproduce his own drawings, which were in great demand. Additional Reading Twentieth-century treatments of Parmigianino's works include S.J. Freedberg, Parmigianino: His Works in Painting (1950, reissued 1971); A.E. Popham, Catalogue of the Drawings of Parmigianino, 3 vol. (1971); and Paola Rossi, L'opera completa del Parmigianino (1980). Later works include Sylvie Béguin, Mario Di Giampaolo, and Mary Vaccaro, Parmigianino: The Drawings (2000; originally published in Italian, 2000); Mary Vaccaro, Parmigianino: The Paintings (2002); David Franklin, The Art of Parmigianino (2003); and David Ekserdjian, Parmigianino (2006). |
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