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Encyclopedia > Raphael Sanzio
This page is about the artist. For other references to Raphael, see Raphael (disambiguation).
self-portrait
self-portrait

Raphael or Raffaello, a painter and architect of the Florentine school in the Italian High Renaissance, was born on April 6, 1483 and died on his 37th birthday, April 6, 1520 (see the note below about earlier confusion about these dates). He was also called Raffaello Sanzio, Raffaello Santi, Raffaello da Urbino or Rafael Sanzio de Urbino.


His life was described in Giorgio Vasari's Vite. Born in Urbino, he studied in Perugia under Pietro Perugino; but after moving to Florence he soon adopted the styles of Leonardo and Michelangelo.

Contents

Major works

Raphael is best known for his Madonnas and Holy families and for his large frescoes in the Vatican Palace. In 1509 indeed, he was called to Rome to decorate the Vatican Stanze (rooms), for Pope Julius II. The best known of these works are the School of Athens and the Disputation on the Blessed Sacrament, two large, arch-shaped frescoes, the first depicting the pagan philosophers of Antiquity grouped around Plato and Aristotle and the second depicting Christian theologians grouped under Jesus.


Under Pope Leo X he was chief architect of Saint Peter's Basilica in 1514 and he was named as a sort of supervisor for Roman archaeology research.


He died on his 37th birthday in Rome (reportedly just weeks before Leo was to invest him as a cardinal), deeply lamented by all who knew his value. His body lay for a while in state in one of the rooms in which he had demonstrated his genius, and he was honoured with a public funeral. His last work, the Transfiguration, was carried before him in the funeral procession. The unrelenting hand of death (says his biographer) set a period to his labours, and deprived the world of further benefit from his talents, when he had only attained an age at which most other men are but beginning to be useful. "We see him in his cradle (said Fuseli); we hear him stammer; but propriety rocked the cradle, and character formed his lips."[1] (http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/1/3/8/11387/11387-h/11387-h.htm)


He was interred in the Pantheon, the country's most honored place.


Dates of birth and death

There is often confusion about Raphael's dates. Sources variously say: (a) Raphael died on his 37th birthday; (b) he died on the eve of his 37th birthday; (c) both his dates of birth and death were Good Friday; and (d) there have been mistakes in converting from the Julian Calendar to the Gregorian Calendar. Clearly, these statements cannot all be true.


The truth seems to be as follows:

Enlarge
"Woman with a veil (La Donna Velata)", Painted 1516

See also

External links and references

  • Raffaello Sanzio Biography (http://www.kfki.hu/~arthp/bio/r/raphael/biograph.html)
  • Webmuseum, Paris: Raphael (http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/raphael/)
  • Artsworld: Biography: Raffaello Sanzio Raphael (http://www.artsworld.com/art-architecture/biographies/p-r/raffaello-sanzio-raphael.html)
  • Olga's Gallery: Raphael (http://www.abcgallery.com/R/raphael/raphaelbio.html)
  • Artcyclopedia: Raphael (http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/raphael.html)
  • Exhibition: Raphael: Art and Philosophy (http://www.unesco.org/phiweb/uk/raphael/raphael.html)
  • Parodies and misuses of Raphael's cherubs from the Sistine Madona (http://www.isidore-of-seville.com/angels/20.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Raphael Sanzio - LoveToKnow 1911 (9502 words)
Though Raphael lost his father at the age of eleven, yet to him he certainly owed a great part of that early training which enabled him to produce paintings of apparently mature beauty when he was scarcely twenty years of age.
Raphael's painting, though by far the more beautiful of the two, is yet inferior to that of Pinturicchio in the composition of the whole; an awkward horizontal line divides the upper group of the Coronation from that below, the apostles standing round the Virgin's tomb, filled with roses and lilies (Dante, Par.
For him Raphael painted, in 1513-14, the very beautiful fresco of the Triumph of Galatea in his new palace by the Tiber bank, the Villa Farnesina, and also made a large series of magnificent designs from Apuleius's romance of Cupid and Psyche, which were carried out by a number of his pupils.
Raphael (TMNT) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1418 words)
Raphael's anger is not always fully explored, although in certain incarnations of the TMNT, it seems his anger stems from realizing, more than his brothers do, that they are the only creatures of their kind and are ultimately alone.
Raphael mellowed somewhat as the series went on; possibly a key moment for his character development was when he allowed Leonardo alone to defeat The Shredder in Issue 21 of Volume 1.
Ninjara, Raphael's girlfriend in the TMNT Archie comic series, was once a part of an ancient race of humanoid foxes living on a hidden island off the coast of Japan.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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