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Raphael (painter) (1483-1520) (properly,
Raffaelo Sanzio),
Italian painter who was one of the leading artists of the Italian Renaissance. He created many of the most significant paintings of
the early
16th century and his art was extremely influential for centuries after
his
death.
Raphael was born in Urbino on March 28 or April 6, 1483. His father,
the artist Giovanni di Santi, worked mainly for Francesco Gonzaga in Mantua, and Raphael spent his youth in a courtly
environment. In 1500, so Vasari records, Raphael was apprenticed to Perugino, a highly respected artist who was one of the first in Italy
to paint
extensively in oil. He employed pure strong colours for his
figures, which were imbued with a particularly sweet air of piety,
often
setting them in landscapes infused with pale, shimmering light.
Raphael's early paintings include large altarpieces as well as smaller works, both devotional and secular,
many of
them made for the court at Urbino. One such is a small panel painting, St George Slaying the Dragon (c. 1505,
National Gallery of Art, Washington,
D.C.); it seems to be
connected
with Guidobaldo da Montefeltro's election to the Order of the Garter in
1504
and is remarkable for its miniature precision and the knowledge of the
work of
the Flemish painter Han Memling that it displays. Raphael's earliest
large-scale paintings were executed in Città di Castello, which was a
day's
ride from Urbino. Works such as the Sposalizio
(or Marriage of the Virgin) (1504,
Brera, Milan)
and the Coronation of the Virgin (c.
1503, Vatican
Museum, Rome)
demonstrate Perugino's influence in
their static composition and sweet figure style. Although intentionally
similar
in composition to earlier works by Perugino, Raphael's paintings
already
possessed a dynamic spatial quality that is lacking in the former's
work, and
his consummate technical mastery and idealizing imagination led to his
working
in competition with his former master on altarpieces in Perugia, for
instance
the Ansidei Altarpiece (1505,
National Gallery, London) made for Bernardino Ansidei for the chapel of
St
Nicholas of Bari in the Servite church of San Fiorenzo.
Raphael's visit to Florence in about 1504 seems to have been motivated by
his desire to see the work of Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, perhaps in order to improve
his skills in areas such as anatomy and perspective, where he was still
inexpert. He did not settle there but visited frequently between 1504
and 1508.
His work during these years was extremely varied in nature and scale,
ranging
from the series of madonnas he painted for individuals, such as the Small Cowper Madonna (c. 1505, National
Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.) to the large-scale religious works
commissioned for churches, such as The
Entombment (1507, Borghese Gallery, Rome).
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Raphael's style developed fully during the years
1504-1508. He
lost Perugino's air of sweetness and developed a bolder, more
monumental manner
that was partly inspired by the works of Fra Bartolommeo. While his madonnas were
idealized portraits of tranquil women, he also painted real sitters; in
La Muta (c. 1507, Ducal Palace, Urbino),
the subject's finger extends to press against the picture frame,
creating an
arresting and original pictorial device that reinforces the analogy
that a
painting is akin to a window.
During his period in Florence,
Raphael was influenced by the pyramidal compositions of Leonardo, as
can be
seen in La Belle Jardinière (c. 1507,
Musée du Louvre, Paris). This is one of a series of paintings of the
Virgin and
Child, often with St John the Baptist, in an outdoor setting. Leonardo's influence is
also apparent in the Bridgewater Madonna
(c. 1507, Duke of Sutherland Collection, on loan to National Gallery of
Scotland);
here, the Virgin's sweetly smiling expression and contraposto
(twisted) pose are derived from Leonardo, while the
pose of the Infant Jesus is derived from Michelangelo.
In 1508 Raphael was summoned to Rome by Pope Julius II in order to decorate a
suite of offical rooms in the Vatican
known as the Stanze. He started with the Stanza della Segnatura, the
office in
which documents were sealed, producing a series of frescos concerned with different aspects of the human intellect.
The most
famous of these, the School of Athens
(1509-1511), represents groups of Greek philosophers in a monumental Classical
setting. Despite the great number and variety of figures, the painting
has a
remarkably balanced, unified composition, dominated by the eloquently
gesturing
figures of Plato and Aristotle in the centre. The other
frescos in the Stanza, representing theology, poetry, and law, have a similarly harmonious quality, which
also characterizes the Stanza dell'Eliodoro (1511-1514). This was
followed by
two further rooms, which were mostly executed by Raphael's assistants,
in
particular Giulio Romano, who were also responsible for painting the
Vatican Loggie, completed in 1519. During this period Raphael also
produced a
series of cartoons (1515-1516, Royal Collection, on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum,
London)
for tapestries that were to be hung in the Sistine Chapel. These
memorable
compositions, representing scenes from the lives of St Peter and St Paul, were to be enormously influential on later
artists.
As well as working for the papacy, Raphael also received
important
commissions from private patrons, in particular the banker Agostino
Chigi, for
whom he decorated two chapels, at Santa Maria della Pace (c. 1512-1513)
and
Santa Maria del Popolo (1516). For Chigi he also adorned the Villa
Farnesina
with sensual mythological frescos depicting Galatea (c. 1511) and scenes from the story of Cupid and Psyche (1516-1517), the latter painted so as to create
a trompe l'oeil effect of tapestries suspended overhead.
Raphael's interiors were profoundly influenced by the grotesque style
of
ornamentation inside the Domus Aurea, the recently excavated palace of
the
Roman emperor Nero. This is particularly apparent in the stuccoed
loggia of the Villa Madama, built by Raphael for Cardinal Giulio de'
Medici
(begun c. 1518). Raphael also experimented with profuse decoration on
an
exterior in the (now destroyed) Palazzo Branconio dell'Aquila. Such
works
contrast greatly with the austere beauty of Sant'Eligio degli Orefici,
a small
church, in the form of a domed Greek cross, which was designed by
Raphael and
(probably) Bramante around 1509. While the church's lucid
geometrical structure and restrained decoration typify the High
Renaissance,
the later buildings clearly anticipate the complexity of Mannerism. During this period Raphael also produced memorable
works on
panel and canvas, including a number of portraits: these included a
remarkably
frank depiction of the aged Pope Julius
II (c. 1511, National Gallery, London), as well as Pope
Leo X and Two Cardinals (c. 1519, Uffizi, Florence) and the
nobleman Baldassare Castiglione (c.
1516, Musée du Louvre, Paris). Raphael also executed a number of
extraordinary
altarpieces, including the celebrated Sistine
Madonna (c. 1513, Gemäldegalerie, Dresden), a magnificent image of
the
Virgin and Child appearing among radiant clouds, above two of the most
engaging
putti (cherubs) in Renaissance art. Equally extraordinary is The Transfiguration (1517-1520, Vatican,
Rome),
completed by
Giulio Romano after Raphael's death, which greatly influenced the
crowded,
dynamic compositions of later Mannerist painters.
Raphael's death in Rome
on April 6, 1520,
cut short an immensely successful and productive career. His work
exemplifies
the confidence and originality of the High Renaissance. Like
Michelangelo, he
produced works of supreme harmony and grandeur, while also on occasion
introducing qualities that would later be associated with Mannerism.
Through
the engravings of Marcantonio Raimondi, his compositions became widely known
throughout his lifetime, and his influence on academic painters in
subsequent
centuries was inestimable.
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