Juan Correa
Juan Correa was a distinguished Mexican painter of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. His years of greatest activity were from 1671 to 1716.
Career
Correa was the Afro-Mexican son of a mulatto physician from Cádiz, Spain, and a freed black woman, Pascuala de Santoyo. Correa "became one of the most prominent artists in New Spain during his lifetime, along with Cristóbal de Villalpando."Correa was a highly productive religious painter, with two major paintings in the sacristy of the Cathedral of Mexico City, one on the subject of the Assumption and Coronation of the Virgin, and the Entry into Jerusalem. Elsewhere in the cathedral he created the Vision of the Apocalypse, and other versions of the Assumption and Coronation of the Virgin. His two canvases for the sacristy are regarded as masterpieces of Mexican baroque. Correa also painted major works for the Jesuit church in Tepozotlan, Mexico, the Chapel of the Rosary in the convent of Azcapotzalco and—based on models by ——for the cathedral of Durango. His last known work from the early 18th century was documented at Antigua, Guatemala, in 1739.
Correa was the teacher of José de Ibarra and Juan Rodríguez Juarez. His brother, José Correa, his nephews Miguel Correa and Diego Correa, and his grandsons worked as painters.
Style
It is estimated that Correa produced around 500 paintings for churches and private patrons during the course of his life. His themes are mainly catholic. His early style was described by Ilona Katzew as having a "vibrant palette, elegant composition, and overall emphasis on decorative details subtle color gradations that provide a sense of iridescence and contribute to the overall mystical effect." It is often unclear if a painting should be attributed to Juan Correa alone, or to his family atelier. According to Kathryn Santner, "the immense success of the Correa family demonstrates that Afrodescendant artists were indeed able to function in colonial Mexico as prominent artists within the guild system.Manuel Toussaint considers Correa and Villalpando the main exponents of the Baroque style of painting in Mexico. According to Toussaint, Correa was "important in achieving a new quality, in the creative impulse he expresses, and which one cannot doubt embodies the eagerness of New Spain for an art of its own, breaking away from its Spanish lineage. Here New Spain attains its own personality, unique and unmistakable." James Oles writes that "Correa and Villalpando created a distinctive—if at times formulaic—style that hearkened back to the strong Mannerist traditions of the mid-sixteenth century."