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Correggio, Heads of Two Angels

Key facts
Full title Heads of Two Angels
Artist Correggio
Artist dates active 1494; died 1534
Series Fragments from The Coronation of the Virgin
Date made probably about 1522
Medium and support Fresco
Dimensions 44.5 × 61 cm
Acquisition credit Mond Bequest, 1924
Inventory number NG3921
Location Not on display
Collection Main Collection
Heads of Two Angels
Correggio
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This is a fresco fragment from Correggio’s Coronation of the Virgin, which he painted in the apse of the church of S. Giovanni Evangelista in Parma, Italy. The fresco depicted Christ crowning the Virgin in heaven surrounded by the evangelists, doctors of the church and infant angels. Christ and the Virgin Mary were seated beneath a flowering garden pergola against the golden sun of paradise.

These heads belonged to the two angels standing behind Saint John the Evangelist. The foremost angel was originally looking up at the Holy Ghost descending in the form of a white dove as Christ crowned the Virgin with a coronet of stars.

The apse of the church was destroyed in the 1580s, but the central figures of Correggio’s fresco showing the coronation of the Virgin were saved and are in the Galleria Nazionale, Parma.

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Fragments from The Coronation of the Virgin

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These are fresco fragments from Correggio’s Coronation of the Virgin, which once decorated the apse of the church of S. Giovanni Evangelista in Parma. The fresco depicted Christ crowning the Virgin Mary in paradise surrounded by the evangelists and doctors of the church, and baby angels known in Italian as putti.

The Virgin was the principal patron saint of Parma and the coronation of the Virgin was depicted on the city’s seal as well as its coinage. A coin of 1526 shows a design particularly close to Correggio’s Coronation of the Virgin, suggesting that his fresco had an immediate impact on the city.

The apse was destroyed when the choir was enlarged, but the heads of angels were saved and are now in the National Gallery. The central figures showing Christ and the Virgin are now in the Galleria Nazionale, Parma. In 1587 a replica of Correggio’s fresco was painted in the new apse of S. Giovanni Evangelista.