JUAN CORREA

Details
JUAN CORREA
Mexican School, 17th Century

The Guardian Angel

oil on canvas
67¼ x 43½in. (170.8 x 110.5cm.)
Provenance
Bill Morgenstern, Miami
Literature
M.Toussaint, Pintura Colonial en Mexico, p.120-121
E.Vargas Lugo, J. Guadalupe Victoria, Juan Correa. Su Vida y su Obra, Mexico City, 1985, I-II
Exhibited
Washington D.C., The Organization of American States, The Art Museum of the Americas, Temples of Gold, Crowns of Silver: Colonial Art of the Americas, May-June 1991, n.n.
Washington D.C., George Washington University, Dimock Gallery, Temples of Gold, Crowns of Silver: Reflections of Majesty in the Viceregal Americas, June-Sept. 1991, no.56 (illustrated)
Miami, The Historical Museum of Southern Florida, Temples of Gold, Crowns of Silver, Jan.-March, 1992, no. 19 (illustrated)

Lot Essay

The earliest documented activity of Juan Correa (ca. 1650-1740) in Mexico City began in 1674. At the end of his career he settled in Antigua (Guatemala), where the last recorded date of his oeuvre is 1739. Director of a flourishing atelier that produced a prolific number of paintings, Correa remains one of the most important artists of viceregal New Spain. Between 1684 and 1692 he decorated the Sacristy of the Cathedral of Mexico with an equally famous contemporary, Cristóbal Villalpando (1652-1714). Mutual stylistic influences resulted from this collaboration of Baroque Titans. Correa excelled in themes of angelology (Metropolitan Cathedral, Cathedral of Mexico, Convent of St. Francis at San Miguel de Allende, Chapel of Zapateros at Tlalpujahua). The Guardian Angel shares features in common with Correa's extant paintings: the exuberant posture of the heavenly protector; the fluidity of drapery; the display of bold colors and dramatic cloud formations. Correa must have known paintings by Martin de Vos at the Cathedral of Mexico and at Cuautitlán, as well as engravings after his work. The Jesuit and Franciscan Orders especially promoted the Counter-Reformation cult of the "Guardian Angels", stressing their role as divine intermediaries between the celestial macrocosm and earthly microscosm.

Dr. Barbara von Barghahn
Washington, D.C., 1992