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Italian painter and
architect of the Italian High Renaissance, his full name is Raffaello
Sanzio. Raphael is best known for his Madonnas and for his large figure
compositions in the Vatican in Rome. His work is admired for its clarity
of form and ease of composition and for its visual achievement of the
Neoplatonic ideal of human grandeur.
Early years at
Urbino
Raphael was
the son of Giovanni Santi and Magia di Battista Ciarla; his mother died
in 1491. His father was, according to the 16th-century artist and biographer
Giorgio Vasari, a painter "of no great merit." He was, however, a man
of culture who was in constant contact with the advanced artistic ideas
current at the court of Urbino. He gave his son his first instruction
in painting, and, before his death in 1494, when Raphael was 11, he had
introduced the boy to humanistic philosophy at the court.
Urbino had become
a centre of culture during the rule of Duke Federico da Montefeltro, who
encouraged the arts and attracted the visits of men of outstanding talent,
including Donato Bramante,
Piero della Francesca, and
Leon Battista Alberti,
to his court. Although Raphael would be influenced by major artists in
Florence and Rome, Urbino constituted the basis for all his subsequent
learning. Furthermore, the cultural vitality of the city probably stimulated
the exceptional precociousness of the young artist, who, even at the beginning
of the 16th century, when he was scarcely 17 years old, already displayed
an extraordinary talent.
Apprenticeship
at Perugia
The date of
Raphael's arrival in Perugia is not known, but several scholars place
it in 1495. The first record of Raphael's activity as a painter is found
there in a document of Dec. 10, 1500, declaring that the young painter,
by then called a "master," was commissioned to help paint an altarpiece
to be completed by Sept. 13, 1502. It is clear from this that Raphael
had already given proof of his mastery, so much so that between 1501 and
1503 he received a rather important commission - to paint the Coronation
of the Virgin for the Oddi Chapel in the church of San Francesco, Perugia
(and now in the Vatican Museum, Rome). The great Umbrian master Pietro
Perugino was executing the frescoes in the Collegio del Cambio at Perugia
between 1498 and 1500, enabling Raphael, as a member of his workshop,
to acquire extensive professional knowledge.
In addition
to this practical instruction, Perugino's calmly exquisite style also
influenced Raphael. The Giving of the Keys to St Peter, painted in 1481-82
by Perugino for the Sistine Chapel of the Vatican Palace in Rome, inspired
Raphael's first major work, The Marriage of the Virgin (1504; Brera Gallery,
Milan). Perugino's influence is seen in the emphasis on perspectives,
in the graded relationships between the figures and the architecture,
and in the lyrical sweetness of the figures. Nevertheless, even in this
early painting, it is clear that Raphael's sensibility was different from
his teacher's. The disposition of the figures is less rigidly related
to the architecture, and the disposition of each figure in relation to
the others is more informal and animated. The sweetness of the figures
and the gentle relation between them surpasses anything in Perugino's
work.
Three small
paintings done by Raphael shortly after The Marriage of the Virgin - Vision
of a Knight, Three Graces, and St Michael - are masterful examples of
narrative painting, showing, as well as youthful freshness, a maturing
ability to control the elements of his own style. Although he had learned
much from Perugino, Raphael by late 1504 needed other models to work from;
it is clear that his desire for knowledge was driving him to look beyond
Perugia.
Move to Florence
Vasari vaguely
recounts that Raphael followed the Perugian painter
Bernardino Pinturicchio
to Siena and then went on to Florence, drawn there by accounts of the
work that Leonardo da Vinci and
Michelangelo were undertaking in that
city. By the autumn of 1504 Raphael had certainly arrived in Florence.
It is not known if this was his first visit to Florence, but, as his works
attest, it was about 1504 that he first came into substantial contact
with this artistic civilization, which reinforced all the ideas he had
already acquired and also opened to him new and broader horizons. Vasari
records that he studied not only the works of Leonardo, Michelangelo,
and Fra Bartolomeo, who were the masters of the High Renaissance, but
also "the old things of Masaccio," a pioneer of the naturalism that marked
the departure of the early Renaissance from the Gothic.
Still, his principal
teachers in Florence were Leonardo and Michelangelo. Many of the works
that Raphael executed in the years between 1505 and 1507, most notably
a great series of Madonnas including The Madonna of the Goldfinch (c.
1505; Uffizi Gallery, Florence), the Madonna del Prato (c. 1505; Kunsthistorisches
Museum, Vienna), the Esterházy Madonna (c. 1505-07; Museum of Fine Arts,
Budapest), and La Belle Jardinière (c. 1507; Louvre Museum, Paris), are
marked by the influence of Leonardo, who since 1480 had been making great
innovations in painting. Raphael was particularly influenced by Leonardo's
Madonna and Child with St. Anne pictures, which are marked by an intimacy
and simplicity of setting uncommon in 15th-century art. Raphael learned
the Florentine method of building up his composition in depth with pyramidal
figure masses; the figures are grouped as a single unit, but each retains
its own individuality and shape. A new unity of composition and suppression
of inessentials distinguishes the works he painted in Florence. Raphael
also owed much to Leonardo's lighting techniques; he made moderate use
of Leonardo's chiaroscuro (i.e., strong contrast between light and dark),
and he was especially influenced by his sfumato (i.e., use of extremely
fine, soft shading instead of line to delineate forms and features). Raphael
went beyond Leonardo, however, in creating new figure types whose round,
gentle faces reveal uncomplicated and typically human sentiments but raised
to a sublime perfection and serenity.
In 1507 Raphael
was commissioned to paint the Deposition of Christ that is now in the
Borghese Gallery in Rome. In this work, it is obvious that Raphael set
himself deliberately to learn from Michelangelo the expressive possibilities
of human anatomy. But Raphael differed from Leonardo and Michelangelo,
who were both painters of dark intensity and excitement, in that he wished
to develop a calmer and more extroverted style that would serve as a popular,
universally accessible form of visual communication.
Last years in Rome
Raphael was
called to Rome toward the end of 1508 by Pope Julius II at the suggestion
of the architect Donato Bramante. At this time Raphael was little known
in Rome, but the young man soon made a deep impression on the volatile
Julius and the papal court, and his authority as a master grew day by
day. Raphael was endowed with a handsome appearance and great personal
charm in addition to his prodigious artistic talents, and he eventually
became so popular that he was called "the prince of painters."
Raphael spent
the last 12 years of his short life in Rome. They were years of feverish
activity and successive masterpieces. His first task in the city was to
paint a cycle of frescoes in a suite of medium-sized rooms in the Vatican
papal apartments in which Julius himself lived and worked; these rooms
are known simply as the Stanze. The Stanza della Segnatura (1508-11) and
Stanza d'Eliodoro (1512-14) were decorated practically entirely by Raphael
himself; the murals in the Stanza dell'Incendio (1514-17), though designed
by Raphael, were largely executed by his numerous assistants and pupils.
The decoration
of the Stanza della Segnatura was perhaps Raphael's greatest work. Julius
II was a highly cultured man who surrounded himself with the most illustrious
personalities of the Renaissance. He entrusted Bramante with the construction
of a new basilica of St. Peter to replace the original 4th-century church;
he called upon Michelangelo to execute his tomb and compelled him against
his will to decorate the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel; and, sensing the
genius of Raphael, he committed into his hands the interpretation of the
philosophical scheme of the frescoes in the Stanza della Segnatura. This
theme was the historical justification of the power of the Roman Catholic
church through Neoplatonic philosophy.
The four main
fresco walls in the Stanza della Segnatura are occupied by the Disputa
and the School of Athens on the larger walls and the Parnassus and Cardinal
Virtues on the smaller walls. The two most important of these frescoes
are the Disputa and the School of Athens. The Disputa, showing a celestial
vision of God and his prophets and apostles above a gathering of representatives,
past and present, of the Roman Catholic church, equates through its iconography
the triumph of the church and the triumph of truth. The School of Athens
is a complex allegory of secular knowledge, or philosophy, showing
Plato
and Aristotle surrounded by philosophers, past and present, in a splendid
architectural setting; it illustrates the historical continuity of Platonic
thought. The School of Athens is perhaps the most famous of all Raphael's
frescoes, and one of the culminating artworks of the High Renaissance.
Here Raphael fills an ordered and stable space with figures in a rich
variety of poses and gestures, which he controls in order to make one
group of figures lead to the next in an interweaving and interlocking
pattern, bringing the eye to the central figures of Plato and Aristotle
at the converging point of the perspectival space. The space in which
the philosophers congregate is defined by the pilasters and barrel vaults
of a great basilica that is based on Bramante's design for the new St
Peter's in Rome. The general effect of the fresco is one of majestic calm,
clarity, and equilibrium.
About the same
time, probably in 1511, Raphael painted a more secular subject, the Triumph
of Galatea in the Villa Farnesina in Rome; this work was perhaps the High
Renaissance's most successful evocation of the living spirit of classical
antiquity. Meanwhile, Raphael's decoration of the papal apartments continued
after the death of Julius in 1513 and into the succeeding pontificate
of Leo X until 1517. In contrast to the generalized allegories in the
Stanza della Segnatura, the decorations in the second room, the Stanza
d'Eliodoro, portray specific miraculous events in the history of the Christian
church. The four principal subjects are The Expulsion of Heliodorus from
the Temple, The Miracle at Bolsena, The Liberation of St Peter, and Leo
I Halting Attila. These frescoes are deeper and richer in colour than
are those in the earlier room, and they display a new boldness on Raphael's
part in both their dramatic subjects and their unusual effects of light.
The Liberation of St Peter, for example, is a night scene and contains
three separate lighting effects - moonlight, the torch carried by a soldier,
and the supernatural light emanating from an angel. Raphael delegated
his assistants to decorate the third room, the Stanze dell'Incendio, with
the exception of one fresco, the Fire in the Borgo, in which his pursuit
of more dramatic pictorial incidents and his continuing study of the male
nude are plainly apparent.
The Madonnas
that Raphael painted in Rome show him turning away from the serenity and
gentleness of his earlier works in order to emphasize qualities of energetic
movement and grandeur. His Alba Madonna (1508; National Gallery, Washington)
epitomizes the serene sweetness of the Florentine Madonnas but shows a
new maturity of emotional expression and supreme technical sophistication
in the poses of the figures. It was followed by the Madonna di Foligno
(1510; Vatican Museum) and the Sistine Madonna (1513; Gemäldegalerie,
Dresden), which show both the richness of colour and new boldness in compositional
invention typical of Raphael's Roman period. Some of his other late Madonnas,
such as the Madonna of Francis I (Louvre), are remarkable for their polished
elegance. Besides his other accomplishments, Raphael became the most important
portraitist in Rome during the first two decades of the 16th century.
He introduced new types of presentation and new psychological situations
for his sitters, as seen in the portrait of Leo X with Two Cardinals (1517-19;
Uffizi, Florence). Raphael's finest work in the genre is perhaps the Portrait
of Baldassare Castiglione (1516; Louvre), a brilliant and arresting character
study.
Leo X commissioned
Raphael to design 10 large tapestries to hang on the walls of the Sistine
Chapel. Seven of the ten cartoons (full-size preparatory drawings) were
completed by 1516, and the tapestries woven after them were hung in place
in the chapel by 1519. The tapestries themselves are still in the Vatican,
while seven of Raphael's original cartoons are in the British royal collection
and are on view at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. These cartoons
represent Christ's Charge to Peter, The Miraculous Draught of Fishes,
The Death of Ananias, The Healing of the Lame Man, The Blinding of Elymas,
The Sacrifice at Lystra, and St Paul Preaching at Athens. In these pictures
Raphael created prototypes that would influence the European tradition
of narrative history painting for centuries to come. The cartoons display
Raphael's keen sense of drama, his use of gestures and facial expressions
to portray emotion, and his incorporation of credible physical settings
from both the natural world and that of ancient Roman architecture.
While he was
at work in the Stanza della Segnatura, Raphael also did his first architectural
work, designing the church of Sant' Eligio degli Orefici. In 1513 the
banker Agostino Chigi, whose Villa Farnesina Raphael had already decorated,
commissioned him to design and decorate his funerary chapel in the church
of Santa Maria del Popolo. In 1514 Leo X chose him to work on the basilica
of St Peter's alongside Bramante; and when Bramante died later that year,
Raphael assumed the direction of the work, transforming the plans of the
church from a Greek, or radial, to a Latin, or longitudinal, design.
Raphael was
also a keen student of archaeology and of ancient Greco-Roman sculpture,
echoes of which are apparent in his paintings of the human figure during
the Roman period. In 1515 Leo X put him in charge of the supervision of
the preservation of marbles bearing valuable Latin inscriptions; two years
later he was appointed commissioner of antiquities for the city, and he
drew up an archaeological map of Rome. Raphael had by this time been put
in charge of virtually all of the papacy's various artistic projects in
Rome, involving architecture, paintings and decoration, and the preservation
of antiquities.
Raphael's last
masterpiece is the Transfiguration (commissioned in 1517), an enormous
altarpiece that was unfinished at his death and completed by his assistant
Giulio Romano. It now hangs in the Vatican Museum. The Transfiguration
is a complex work that combines extreme formal polish and elegance of
execution with an atmosphere of tension and violence communicated by the
agitated gestures of closely crowded groups of figures. It shows a new
sensibility that is like the prevision of a new world, turbulent and dynamic;
in its feeling and composition it inaugurated the Mannerist movement and
tends toward an expression that may even be called Baroque.
Raphael died
on his 37th birthday. His funeral mass was celebrated at the Vatican,
his Transfiguration was placed at the head of the bier, and his body was
buried in the Pantheon in Rome.
Works
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