Raphael. Raffaello Santi. Raphael - paintings and frescoes Poetic, majestic Leonardo and rebellious, with a dazzling passion for painting Michelangelo! A real titanic battle of the elements. Young Raphael needs to come out of the fire of this battle unscorched, remaining on his own

Raphael (actually Raffaello Santi or Sanzio, Raffaello Santi, Sanzio) (March 26 or 28, 1483, Urbino - April 6, 1520, Rome), Italian painter and architect.

Raphael, the son of the painter Giovanni Santi, spent his early years in Urbino. In 1500-1504, Raphael, according to Vasari, studied with the artist Perugino in Perugia.

From 1504, Raphael worked in Florence, where he became acquainted with the works of Leonardo da Vinci and Fra Bartolommeo, and studied anatomy and scientific perspective.
Moving to Florence played a huge role in Raphael's creative development. Of primary importance for the artist was familiarity with the method of the great Leonardo da Vinci.
Following Leonardo, Raphael begins to work a lot from life, studying anatomy, mechanics of movements, complex poses and angles, looking for compact, rhythmically balanced compositional formulas.
The numerous images of Madonnas he created in Florence brought the young artist all-Italian fame.
Raphael received an invitation from Pope Julius II to Rome, where he was able to become more familiar with ancient monuments and took part in archaeological excavations. Having moved to Rome, the 26-year-old master received the position of “artist of the Apostolic See” and the assignment to paint the state rooms of the Vatican Palace, from 1514 he directed the construction of St. Peter’s Cathedral, worked in the field of church and palace architecture, in 1515 he was appointed Commissioner of Antiquities, responsible for the study and protection of ancient monuments, archaeological excavations. Fulfilling the pope's order, Raphael created murals in the halls of the Vatican, glorifying the ideals of freedom and earthly happiness of man, the limitlessness of his physical and spiritual capabilities.

The painting “Madonna Conestabile” by Rafael Santi was created by the artist at the age of twenty.

In this painting, the young artist Raphael created his first remarkable embodiment of the image of the Madonna, which occupied an extremely important place in his art. The image of a young beautiful mother, generally so popular in Renaissance art, is especially close to Raphael, whose talent had a lot of softness and lyricism.

Unlike the 15th century masters in the painting young artist Raphael Santi, new qualities have emerged, when the harmonious compositional structure does not fetter the images, but, on the contrary, is perceived as necessary condition the feeling of naturalness and freedom that they generate.

Holy family

1507-1508. Alte Pinakothek, Munich.

Painting by artist Raphael Santi “The Holy Family” by Canigiani.

The customer of the work is Domenico Canigianini from Florence. In the painting “The Holy Family”, the great Renaissance painter Raphael Santi depicted it in a classical manner biblical history- the holy family - the Virgin Mary, Joseph, the baby Jesus Christ along with St. Elizabeth and the baby John the Baptist.

However, only in Rome did Raphael overcome the dryness and some stiffness of his early portraits. It was in Rome that Raphael's brilliant talent as a portrait painter reached maturity.

In Raphael’s “Madonnas” of the Roman period, the idyllic mood of his early works is replaced by the recreation of deeper human, maternal feelings, as Mary, full of dignity and spiritual purity, appears as the intercessor of humanity in Raphael’s most famous work - “The Sistine Madonna”.

The painting “The Sistine Madonna” by Raphael Santi was originally created by the great painter as an altar image for the church of San Sisto (St. Sixtus) in Piacenza.

In the painting, the artist depicts the Virgin Mary with the Christ Child, Pope Sixtus II and Saint Barbara. The painting “The Sistine Madonna” is one of the most famous works of world art.

How was the image of the Madonna created? Was there for him real prototype? In this regard, a number of ancient legends are associated with the Dresden painting. Researchers find similarities in the Madonna's facial features with the model of one of Raphael's female portraits - the so-called “Lady in the Veil”. But in resolving this issue, first of all, one should take into account the famous statement of Raphael himself from a letter to his friend Baldassare Castiglione that in creating the image of a perfect female beauty he is guided by a certain idea, which arises on the basis of many impressions from the beauties the artist saw in life. In other words, basically creative method The painter Raphael Santi turns out to be a selection and synthesis of observations of reality.

In the last years of his life, Raphael was so overloaded with orders that he entrusted the execution of many of them to his students and assistants (Giulio Romano, Giovanni da Udine, Perino del Vaga, Francesco Penni and others), usually limiting himself to general supervision of the works.

Raphael had a huge influence on the subsequent development of Italian and European painting, becoming, along with the masters of antiquity, the highest example of artistic perfection. The art of Raphael, which had a tremendous influence on European painting of the 16th-19th and, partly, 20th centuries, for centuries retained the meaning of indisputable artistic authority and model for artists and viewers.

In the last years of his creative work, based on the artist’s drawings, his students created huge cardboards on biblical themes with episodes from the life of the apostles. Based on these cardboards, Brussels masters were supposed to create monumental tapestries, which were intended for decoration Sistine Chapel on holidays.

Paintings by Rafael Santi

The painting “Angel” by Raphael Santi was created by the artist at the age of 17-18 at the very beginning of the 16th century.

This gorgeous early work by the young artist is part or a fragment of the Baroncha altar, damaged by the earthquake of 1789. The altarpiece “Coronation of Blessed Nicholas of Tolentino, conqueror of Satan” was commissioned by Andrea Baronci for his home chapel in the church of San Agostinho in Citta de Castello. In addition to the fragment of the painting “Angel”, three more parts of the altar have been preserved: “The Most High Creator” and “ Holy Virgin Mary” in the Capodimonte Museum (Naples) and another fragment “Angel” in the Louvre (Paris).

The painting “Madonna Granduca” was painted by the artist Rafael Santi after moving to Florence.

The numerous images of Madonnas created by the young artist in Florence (“Madonna of Granduca”, “Madonna of the Goldfinch”, “Madonna of the Greens”, “Madonna with the Child Christ and John the Baptist” or “The Beautiful Gardener” and others) brought Raphael Santi all-Italian fame.

The painting “The Dream of a Knight” was painted by the artist Rafael Santi in the early years of his work.

The painting is from Borghese’s legacy, probably paired with another work by the artist, “The Three Graces.” These paintings - "The Dream of a Knight" and "The Three Graces" - are almost miniature in composition size.

The theme of “The Knight’s Dream” is a unique refraction of the ancient myth of Hercules at the crossroads between the allegorical embodiments of Valor and Pleasure. Near the young knight, depicted sleeping against the backdrop of a beautiful landscape, stand two young women. One of them, in formal attire, offers him a sword and a book, the other a branch with flowers.

In the painting “The Three Graces” the very compositional motif of three naked female figures is apparently borrowed from an antique cameo. And although there is still a lot of uncertainty in these works of the artist (“The Three Graces” and “The Dream of a Knight”), they attract with their naive charm and poetic purity. Already here some features inherent in Raphael’s talent were revealed - the poetry of images, a sense of rhythm and the soft melodiousness of lines.

The altarpiece “Madonna of Ansidei” by Raphael Santi was painted by the artist in Florence; the young painter was not yet 25 years old.

Unicorn, a mythical animal with the body of a bull, horse or goat and one long straight horn on its forehead.

The unicorn is a symbol of purity and virginity. According to legend, only an innocent girl can tame the ferocious unicorn. The painting “Lady with a Unicorn” was painted by Rafael Santi based on a mythological plot popular during the Renaissance and mannerism, which many artists used in their paintings.

The painting “Lady with a Unicorn” was badly damaged in the past, but has now been partially restored.

Painting by Raphael Santi “Madonna in Greenery” or “Mary and Child and John the Baptist”.

In Florence, Raphael created the Madonna cycle, indicating the onset of a new stage in his work. Belonging to the most famous of them, “Madonna of the Greens” (Vienna, Museum), “Madonna with the Goldfinch” (Uffizi) and “Madonna of the Gardener” (Louvre) represent a kind of variants of a common motif - the image of a young beautiful mother with the child Christ and little John the Baptist against the backdrop of a landscape. These are also variations of one theme - the theme of maternal love, bright and serene.

Altarpiece painting "Madonna di Foligno" by Raphael Santi.

In the 1510s, Raphael worked a lot in the field of altar composition. A number of his works of this kind, among which should be called the Madonna di Foligno, lead us to greatest creation his easel painting - “The Sistine Madonna”. This painting was created in 1515-1519 for the Church of St. Sixtus in Piacenza and is now in the Dresden Art Gallery.

The painting “Madonna di Foligno” in its compositional structure is similar to the famous “Sistine Madonna”, with the only difference that in the painting “Madonna di Foligno” there are more characters and the image of the Madonna is distinguished by a kind of internal isolation - her gaze is occupied with her child - the Christ Child .

The painting “Madonna del Impannata” by Rafael Santi was created by the great painter almost at the same time as the famous “Sistine Madonna”.

In the painting, the artist depicts the Virgin Mary with the children Christ and John the Baptist, Saint Elizabeth and Saint Catherine. The painting “Madonna del Impannata” testifies to the further improvement of the artist’s style, to the complication of images in comparison with the soft lyrical images of his Florentine Madonnas.

The mid-1510s were the time of Raphael's best portrait work.

Castiglione, Count Baldassare (Castiglione; 1478-1526) - Italian diplomat and writer. Born near Mantua, he served at various Italian courts, was the ambassador of the Duke of Urbino in the 1500s for Henry VII of England, and from 1507 in France for King Louis XII. In 1525, already at a fairly advanced age, he was sent by the papal nuncio to Spain.

In this portrait, Raphael showed himself to be an outstanding colorist, able to sense color in its complex shades and tonal transitions. The portrait of the Lady in the Veil differs from the portrait of Baldassare Castiglione in its remarkable coloristic qualities.

Researchers of the work of the artist Raphael Santi and historians of Renaissance painting find in the features of the model of this female portrait of Raphael a resemblance to the face of the Virgin Mary in his famous painting “The Sistine Madonna.”

Joan of Aragon

1518 Louvre Museum, Paris.

The customer of the painting is Cardinal Bibbiena, writer and secretary to Pope Leo X; the painting was intended as a gift to the French king Francis I. The portrait was only begun by the artist, and it is not known for certain which of his students (Giulio Romano, Francesco Penni or Perino del Vaga) completed it.

Joanna of Aragon (? -1577) - daughter of the Neapolitan king Federigo (later deposed), wife of Ascanio, Prince Taliacosso, famous for her beauty.

The extraordinary beauty of Joan of Aragon was glorified by contemporary poets in a number of poetic dedications, the collection of which comprised an entire volume, published in Venice

The artist’s painting depicts a classic version of the biblical chapter from the Revelation of John the Theologian or the Apocalypse.
“And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against the dragon, and the dragon and his angels fought against them, but they did not stand, and there was no longer a place for them in heaven. And the great dragon was cast out, that ancient serpent, called the devil and Satan, who deceives the whole world, he was cast out to the earth, and his angels were cast out with him...”

Frescoes by Raphael

The fresco by artist Raphael Santi “Adam and Eve” also has another name - “The Fall”.

The size of the fresco is 120 x 105 cm. Raphael painted the fresco “Adam and Eve” on the ceiling of the pontiff’s chambers.

The fresco by artist Raphael Santi “The School of Athens” also has another name - “Philosophical Conversations”. The size of the fresco, the length of the base is 770 cm. After moving to Rome in 1508, Raphael was entrusted with painting the pope's apartments - the so-called stanzas (that is, rooms), which include three rooms on the second floor of the Vatican Palace and the adjacent hall. The general ideological program of the fresco cycles in the stanzas, as conceived by the customers, was supposed to serve to glorify the authority of the Catholic Church and its head - the Roman high priest.

Along with allegorical and biblical images, individual frescoes depict episodes from the history of the papacy; some compositions include portrait images of Julius II and his successor Leo X.

The customer of the painting “The Triumph of Galatea” is Agostino Chigi, a banker from Siena; The fresco was painted by the artist in the banquet hall of the villa.

Raphael Santi's fresco "The Triumph of Galatea" depicts the beautiful Galatea swiftly moving through the waves on a shell drawn by dolphins, surrounded by newts and naiads.

In one of the first frescoes executed by Raphael, the Dispute, which depicts a conversation about the sacrament of the sacrament, cult motifs were most prominent. The symbol of communion itself - the host (wafer) - is installed on the altar in the center of the composition. The action takes place on two planes - on earth and in heaven. Below, on a stepped dais, the church fathers, popes, prelates, clergy, elders and youths were located on both sides of the altar.

Among other participants here you can recognize Dante, Savonarola, and the pious monk-painter Fra Beato Angelico. Above the entire mass of figures in the lower part of the fresco, like a heavenly vision, the personification of the Trinity appears: God the Father, below him, in a halo of golden rays, is Christ with the Mother of God and John the Baptist, even lower, as if marking the geometric center of the fresco, is a dove in sphere, a symbol of the holy spirit, and on the sides the apostles are seated on floating clouds. And all this huge number of figures, with such a complex compositional design, is distributed with such skill that the fresco leaves an impression of amazing clarity and beauty.

Prophet Isaiah

1511-1512. San Agostinho, Rome.

Raphael's fresco depicts the great biblical prophet of the Old Testament at the moment of revelation of the coming of the Messiah. Isaiah (9th century BC), Hebrew prophet, zealous champion of the religion of Yahweh and denouncer of idolatry. The biblical Book of the Prophet Isaiah bears his name.

One of the four great Old Testament prophets. For Christians, Isaiah’s prophecy about the Messiah (Immanuel; ch. 7, 9 - “...behold, the Virgin will be with child and give birth to a Son, and they will call his name Immanuel”) is of particular significance. The memory of the prophet is revered in the Orthodox Church on May 9 (May 22), in the Catholic Church on July 6.

Frescoes and latest paintings Raphael

The fresco “The Deliverance of the Apostle Peter from Prison,” which depicts the miraculous release of the Apostle Peter from prison by an angel (an allusion to the release of Pope Leo X from French captivity when he was papal legate), makes a very strong impression.

On the ceiling lamps of the papal apartments - Stanza della Segnatura, Raphael painted the frescoes “The Fall”, “The Victory of Apollo over Marsyas”, “Astronomy” and a fresco on the famous Old Testament story “The Judgment of Solomon”.
It is difficult to find in the history of art any other artistic ensemble that would give the impression of such figurative richness in terms of ideological and visual-decorative design as Raphael’s Vatican stanzas. Walls covered with multi-figure frescoes, vaulted ceilings with rich gilded decor, with fresco and mosaic inserts, a beautifully patterned floor - all this could create the impression of overload, if not for the high orderliness inherent in the general design of Raphael Santi, which brings to this complex artistic complex necessary clarity and visibility.

Before recent years Rafael paid great attention to his life monumental painting. One of the artist’s largest works was the painting of the Villa Farnesina, which belonged to the richest Roman banker Chigi.

In the early 1910s, Raphael painted the fresco “The Triumph of Galatea” in the main hall of this villa, which is one of his best works.

Myths about Princess Psyche tell about the desire of the human soul to merge with love. For her indescribable beauty, people revered Psyche more than Aphrodite. According to one version, a jealous goddess sent her son, the deity of love Cupid, to arouse in the girl a passion for the ugliest of people, however, when he saw the beauty, the young man lost his head and forgot about his mother’s order. Having become the husband of Psyche, he did not allow her to look at him. She, burning with curiosity, lit a lamp at night and looked at her husband, not noticing a hot drop of oil falling on his skin, and Cupid disappeared. In the end, by the will of Zeus, the lovers united. Apuleius in Metamorphoses retells the myth of the romantic story of Cupid and Psyche; the wanderings of the human soul, eager to meet its love.

The painting depicts Fornarina, the lover of Rafael Santi, whose real name is Margherita Luti. Fornarina's real name was established by researcher Antonio Valeri, who discovered it in a manuscript from a Florentine library and in a list of nuns of a monastery, where the novice was identified as the widow of the artist Raphael.

Fornarina - legendary lover and Raphael's model, whose real name is Margherita Luti. According to many Renaissance art critics and historians of the artist’s work, Fornarina is depicted on two famous paintings Rafael Santi - “Fornarina” and “The Veiled Lady”. It is also believed that Fornarina, in all likelihood, served as a model for the creation of the image of the Virgin Mary in the painting “ Sistine Madonna", as well as some others female images Raphael.

Transfiguration of Christ

1519-1520. Pinacoteca Vatican, Rome.

The painting was originally created as an altarpiece for the Cathedral of Narbonne, commissioned by Cardinal Giulio Medici, Bishop of Narbonne. The contradictions of the last years of Raphael’s work were most reflected in the huge altar composition “The Transfiguration of Christ” - it was completed after Raphael’s death by Giulio Romano.

This picture is divided into two parts. The upper part shows the actual transformation - this more harmonious part of the picture was done by Raphael himself. Below are the apostles trying to heal a possessed boy

It was Raphael Santi’s altar painting “The Transfiguration of Christ” that became an indisputable model for academic painters for centuries.
Raphael died in 1520. His premature death was unexpected and made a deep impression on his contemporaries.

Rafael Santi deserves his place among greatest masters the era of the High Renaissance.

The great Italian painter was born in 1483 in Urbino. His father was also a painter and graphic artist, so the future master began his training in his father’s workshop.

Raphael's parents died when the boy was barely 11 years old. After their death, he went to Perugia to study in the workshop of Pietro Perugino. He spent about 4 years in the master's workshop and during this time he acquired his own style.

Carier start

As the brief biography of Rafael Santi says, after completing his studies, the artist went to live and work in Florence. Here he met such outstanding masters as Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Bartolomeo della Porta. He learned from these outstanding masters the secrets of portraiture and sculpture.

In 1508, the artist moved to Rome and became the official painter of the papal court. He held this position under both Pope Julius II and Pope Leo X. It was for the latter that Raphael painted the Sistine Chapel - greatest masterpiece Renaissance.

In 1514, Raphael became the chief architect of St. Peter's Basilica. He also did a lot of excavations in Rome, worked on orders for numerous churches, painted portraits (though mostly portraits of friends), and carried out particularly significant private orders.

Retrospective of the artist’s work: the Florentine period

The artist completed his first works in his father’s workshop. Most shining example creativity young artist Banner with the image of the Holy Trinity. This work is still in the house museum in Urbino.

While studying with Pietro Perugino, Raphael began working on the images of his classic Madonnas. His most striking work from 1501 to 1504 is “Madonna Conestabile”.

The Florentine period is the most eventful in Raphael's life. At this time he created his recognized masterpieces, such as: “The Lady with the Unicorn”, “The Holy Family”, “St. Catherine of Alexandria.”

Also during this period he painted a lot of Madonnas. Raphael's Madonna is, first of all, a mother (most likely, the artist was greatly influenced by the early departure of his own mother). The best Madonnas of this period: “Madonna of the Carnation”, “Madonna of Granduca”, “The Beautiful Gardener”.

Retrospective of the artist's work: the Roman period

The Roman period of creativity is the pinnacle of the artist’s career. He departed a little from the classic biblical stories and turned to Antiquity. Recognized world masterpieces are: “The School of Athens”, “Parnassus”, “Sistine Madonna” (the painting on the wall of the Sistine Chapel is the pinnacle of Raphael’s mastery), “Alba Madonna”, “Madonna with the Fish”.

Death of an Artist

Raphael died in 1520, presumably from Roman fever, which he “caught” during excavations. Buried in the Pantheon.

Other biography options

  • Raphael knew A. Durer. It is known that the latter gave Raphael his self-portrait, but its fate is still unknown to this day.
  • Villa Farnesina is a special stage in the artist’s career. We can say that for the first time he turns to ancient mythology and historical painting. This is how the frescoes “The Triumph of Galatea” and “The Wedding of Alexander and Roxana” appear. It is interesting that Raphael also painted from nudes. His best work in this regard is “Fornarina” (it is believed that most of the female portraits made by the artist were copied from his model and beloved Fornarina, about whose fate little is known).
  • Raphael wrote beautiful sonnets, mainly dedicated to the love of women.
  • In 2002, one of Raphael's graphic works was sold at Sotheby's for a record amount for this type of work - 30 million pounds sterling.

Raphael was born in the city of Urbino in 1483 in the family of the artist Giovanni Santi. The atmosphere of the city and his father’s work predetermined the boy’s fate.

In the 15th century, Urbino was one of the most important cities in Italy, a major cultural center. Rulers of Urbino, Dukes of Montefeltro, - famous philanthropists and collectors, they realized the importance of education and enlightenment, loved mathematics, cartography, philosophy, appreciated art and patronized artists.

Giovanni Santi was a court painter and poet. In his father’s workshop, young Raphael learned the basics of painting, and as Giorgio Vasari notes in his “Biographies...”, “he helped his father paint the paintings that Giovanni created while living in Urbino.”

The boy was not even ten years old when he lost his parents and was sent (at the request of his father) to Perugia as an apprentice in the workshop of Pietro Perugino.

Raphael is a quick learner, he was barely 17 years old when he was already mentioned as an independent artist, creating works for his first customers. The artist’s self-portrait drawing dates back to this period. Very little time will pass, and Raphael will become an unsurpassed portrait painter, able to convey not only striking similarities, but also the individuality of his models with the help of color, light, and details. But for now Raphael is a modest student in the studio of a great artist.

2. Betrothal of the Virgin Mary, 1504
Pinacoteca Brera, Milan

Pietro Perugino, who became Raphael's teacher, is the star of the Umbrian school of painting, one of the most sought-after artists of his time. His style is melodic and poetic, pleasing to the eye and imbued with a special lyrical mood. Perugino's images are beautiful and sweet. It is characterized by decorativeness and balance. In an atmosphere of harmony and serenity - all of Perugino.

Raphael, subtle and perceptive, was so accurately able to capture the very essence of his teacher’s art that his first works could be mistaken for the masterpieces of the master Perugino.

In 1504, Raphael created The Betrothal of the Virgin Mary, to a few earlier picture Perugino wrote with the same plot (the wedding of Mary and Joseph).

Before us wedding ceremony: Joseph, in the presence of the priest, hands Mary a wedding ring.

Raphael, following the teacher, places the characters in an ideal space created according to the laws of linear perspective. Behind stands a majestic, also “ideal” temple. However, with “Betrothal,” the 21-year-old student surpasses his teacher in the art of depicting people. Look at the solemn statics of Perugino's characters and the variety of characters and movements in Raphael. Agree, Raphael's heroes are more like real people.

It is also extremely important that Raphael’s predecessors, who were fluent in the techniques of constructing perspective, lined up the characters as if in a line, both in the foreground and in the background. Raphael portrays those present at wedding celebration more realistic, chaotic crowd.

It was “The Betrothal of the Virgin Mary” that became the result of training in the workshop of Pietro Perugino. The impetuous young man was already attracted by blooming Florence...

3. Self-portrait, 1506
Uffizi Gallery, Florence

Rumors are circulating in Italy that something extraordinary is happening in Florence. In the main hall of the city council building, Michelangelo and Leonardo compete in the art of frescoes. Rafael decides to be at the scene of the events.

In 1504, Raphael arrived in Florence, holding a letter of recommendation from his patroness, Giovanna Feltria della Rovere, to the ruler of the Florentine Republic, Pier Soderini. Imagine how Raphael goes to the Palazzo Vecchio and stops, amazed, in Piazza della Signoria. In front of him greatest work art - David, sculpture unprecedented beauty and skill. Raphael is amazed and can't wait to meet Michelangelo.

He will live in Florence for the next four years. This stage will be for him a time of hard work, discipline and close study of the art of Michelangelo and Leonardo. His unique style was born. Undoubtedly, Raphael would not have become Raphael without these difficult years of hard work.

Vasari would later write: “The techniques that he saw in the works of Leonardo and Michelangelo forced him to work even harder in order to extract from them unprecedented benefits for his art and his manner.”

The 23-year-old artist paints his self-portrait, still imbued with the lyrical features of Umbrian painting. This image will survive centuries. It is precisely this way, gentle, impetuous and eternally young, that Raphael will forever remain for posterity.

4. Portraits of Agnolo Doni and Maddalena Strozzi, 1506
Palazzo Pitti, Florence

A gentle disposition, impeccable manners and amazing ease of communication allowed Raphael to achieve the favor of influential patrons and wealthy customers, friendship with the most different people and popularity with women. He managed to win over even Michelangelo and Leonardo, each of whom nature endowed with a great gift and such a difficult character that many preferred to stay away from them.

One of Raphael's important clients during his Florentine period was Agnolo Doni, a wealthy textile merchant, philanthropist and art collector. In honor of his wedding with Maddalena Strozzi, he orders companion portrait. Only a few could afford such a luxury.

For Raphael the portrait painter, it was important not only the ability to convey external resemblance, but also character. One glance at the portrait of Agnolo Doni is enough, and it becomes clear that this is an influential and strong man, this is evidenced by both his imperious pose and his intelligent, calm look. He is dressed well and modestly, and does not strive for ostentatious luxury. Most likely, his interests are varied: he is attracted to trade, politics, art, literature, science. He is the embodiment of the ideal man of the Renaissance, but at the same time he is not a generalized collective image, but a living Florentine recognizable by his contemporaries.

Raphael achieves the same effect in his portrayal of Maddalena Strozzi. On the one hand, before us is a rich city dweller, proud and arrogant, on the other - a young woman, a bride. The graceful tree is designed to emphasize the gentle character of the newlywed. The pendant on Maddalena’s neck, perhaps a wedding gift to Agnolo, also has a special meaning: gems indicate vitality, a large pearl - the purity and purity of the bride.

At this time, Raphael is looking for himself and his style; he is fascinated by the Mona Lisa, which Leonardo had recently completed. He gives his Maddalena a similar pose and enthusiastically searches for his own ways to fill the portrait with magnetism. Raphael would become a master of psychological portraiture, but later, during his heyday in Rome.

5. Mute (La Muta), 1507
National Gallery of Marche, Urbino

This intimate portrait is truly unusual. The artist does not give any obvious hints, and the fact that this is a woman deprived of the ability to speak follows only from the title. The most striking thing about this portrait is the feeling that comes from it. The heroine's muteness is felt in her facial expression, in her gaze, in her inactive, tightly compressed lips. This is Raphael's outstanding talent: he is not only familiar with the smallest features and shades of human nature, but is also able to accurately convey his knowledge and observations through the language of painting.


6. Madonna with the Goldfinch, 1507

Rafael lost his mother in early childhood. Subtle and vulnerable, all his life he felt an urgent need for maternal love and tenderness. And of course, this was reflected in his art. The Madonna and Child is one of the most important subjects for Raphael. He will constantly explore the relationship between mother and child. In Florence, over 4 years, he would paint more than 20 paintings on the theme “Madonna and Child.” From static, imbued with Perugino’s mood (such is his Madonna Granduca, which you can see at the exhibition in Pushkin Museum), to mature, filled with feelings and vitality.

One of these paintings is “Madonna with the Goldfinch.” Before us are the Virgin Mary, the baby Jesus and John the Baptist, handing him a goldfinch, a symbol of the Savior’s terrible trials.

A curious story is connected with the “Madonna of the Goldfinch”, told by Giorgio Vasari: “The greatest friendship connected Raphael and Lorenzo Nasi, for whom, having only just gotten married these days, he painted a painting depicting the infant Christ standing at the knees of the Mother of God, and the young St. John , cheerfully holding out the bird to him, to the greatest joy and to the greatest pleasure of both. Both of them form a group full of a kind of childish simplicity and at the same time deep feeling, not to mention the fact that they are so well done in color and so carefully drawn that they seem to be made of living flesh, and not made with paints and drawing. The same applies to the Mother of God with her blissful and truly divine expression on her face, and in general - the meadow, the oak grove, and everything else in this work in highest degree Wonderful. This painting was kept by Lorenzo Nasi during his lifetime with the greatest reverence, both in memory of Raphael, who was his closest friend, and for the sake of the dignity and perfection of the work itself, which, however, almost died on November 17, 1548, when the collapse of Mount San Giorgio Lorenzo's own house collapsed along with the neighboring houses. The son of the said Lorenzo and the greatest connoisseur of art, having discovered parts of the painting in the rubbish of the ruins, ordered them to be reunited as best as possible.”

7. School of Athens, 1509–1510
Apostolic Palace, Vatican

In 1508, Raphael arrives in Rome at the invitation of Pope Julius II and again finds himself in the center of incredible events: the great Michelangelo paints the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, Bramante, the chief papal architect, rebuilds St. Peter's Cathedral, and prominent artists of his time work in the Stanzas (the Pope's rooms) : Lorenzo Lotto, Peruzzi, Sodoma, Bramantino, as well as Raphael's former teacher, Pietro Perugino.

Rumors about the divine talent of the young artist also reached Julius II, who set out to decorate his reign with outstanding works of art at all costs. Wanting to test Raphael, the Pope instructed him to take care of the room intended for his personal library. Having started work, Raphael so impressed Julius II that he ordered to expel all the artists working in other rooms, destroy the frescoes they had created and entrust the entire project to 25-year-old Raphael alone. Thus began the history of Raphael's Stanzas.

The most famous fresco is rightfully considered the “School of Athens”, which occupies the wall of the Stanza della Segnatura, reserved for the collection of books on philosophy.

“The School of Athens” is a mass stage, a gathering of philosophers, sages and learned men of all times in the Ideal Temple of Wisdom (the architectural space in which the characters are gathered echoes the project of St. Peter’s Cathedral, which at this very time is being built according to Bramante’s design). In the center of the fresco are Plato and Archimedes. The first points to the sky, expressing the essence of his idealistic philosophy with just one gesture, the second points to the earth, emphasizing the importance natural sciences and knowledge.

In addition, the “School of Athens” is the meeting place of Diogenes, Socrates, Pythagoras, Heraclitus, Euclid, Epicurus, Zoroaster and other prominent figures.

It is also interesting that the three most important creators of the High Renaissance are also depicted at the meeting of the “School of Athens”. If you look closely, in Plato you will recognize Leonardo da Vinci, in the mighty Titan-Heraclitus, who sits on the steps, leaning on a block of marble - Michelangelo, look for Raphael himself second from the right in the first row.

Over the years of work on the Stanzas, Raphael becomes a celebrity, the brightest star of Rome. After Bramante's death, Raphael was appointed chief architect of St. Peter's Basilica and chief custodian of Roman antiquities. He is surrounded by patrons, customers, students, friends and beautiful women.

8. Portrait of Baldassare Castiglione, 1514–1515
Louvre, Paris

In Rome, Raphael paints a portrait of his friend and philanthropist Baldassare Castiglione. Look at this extraordinary face and imagine how far the artist’s current style is from the sweet style of Perugino, how cleverly the artist managed to melt down the techniques of Leonardo and Michelangelo, creating his own unique style!

Count Baldassare Castiglione - philosopher, poet, diplomat, one of the most educated people of its time. In addition, he was known for his gentleness, meekness and balance of character. It was these qualities, in the opinion of Raphael himself, that distinguished the ideal man of the Renaissance.

A friendly, slightly thoughtful mature man looks at us from the picture. He is dressed modestly, but with great taste. His face is calm and harmonious, his gaze is penetrating and open. Despite all its external simplicity, this portrait is endowed with special magnetism and psychological depth, comparable to the effect that the image of the Mona Lisa produces on viewers.

9. Fornarina, 1518–1519 (left)
Palazzo Barberini, Rome

The most talked about Raphael's personal life various rumors. According to some of them, the artist was a libertine and died at the age of 37 from syphilis, according to others, less scandalous, from fever. In any case, Raphael was constantly in the center of female attention, and one can only guess what kind of women of origin and occupation posed for the images of his gentle madonnas and nymphs.

For a long time, the identity of the black-eyed beauty from the Fornarina portrait was unknown. Vasari suggests that this is a portrait of “... a woman whom he loved very much until his death, and with whom he painted a portrait so beautiful that she was as if alive.”

A few years earlier, Fornarina posed for Raphael for another masterpiece, The Veiled Lady. If you look closely, the headdresses of both the Fornarina and the Veiled Lady are held together by the same hairpin, perhaps a gift from Raphael.

According to legend, Raphael met Fornarina, the daughter of a baker (fornarina - from Italian for “bakery”), while working on the frescoes of the Villa Farnesina. Then the beauty seemed to be getting married, but Rafael bought her from her father and settled her in the house, where he met her until death separated them. There were rumors that it was Fornarina who killed Raphael. They also said that after his death she went to a monastery out of grief, or that she led such a depraved lifestyle that she was forcibly tonsured a nun.

10. Sistine Madonna, 1513–1514
Gallery of Old Masters, Dresden

« I wanted to be forever a spectator of one picture...” - wrote A. S. Pushkin about the famous Madonna Raphael.

It was in The Sistine Madonna that Raphael managed to reach the pinnacle of his mastery. This picture is amazing. The open curtain reveals to us a heavenly vision: surrounded by a divine glow, the Virgin Mary descends to people. She has the baby Jesus in her arms, her face shows tenderness and concern. It seems that everything in this picture: hundreds of angelic faces, and the respectful gesture of Saint Sixtus, and the humble figure of Saint Barbara, and the heavy curtain - were created so that we could not take our eyes off the face of the Madonna for a second.

And of course, Raphael would not be Raphael if beautiful image Maria would not have noticed the features of his Fornarina.

Raphael died in Rome on April 6 (his birthday) 1520 at the age of 37 at the zenith of his fame.

Many centuries later, while studying the art of Raphael, Pablo Picasso would say: “If Leonardo promised us paradise, then Raphael gave it to us!”

Rafael Santi is a man with incredible fate, the most secret and beautiful painter of the Renaissance. The rulers of Italy envied the talent and intelligence of the brilliant painter, the fairer sex adored him for his cheerful disposition and angelic attractiveness, and for his kindness and generosity his friends nicknamed the artist the messenger of heaven. However, Contemporaries did not suspect that the magnanimous Raphael until the end of his days feared that his mind would fall into the abyss of madness.

History always has its beginning and continuation. So on April 6, 1483, in the small town of the Kingdom of Italy of Urbino, in the house of the court painter of the Dukes of Urbino and poet Giovanni Santi, the great Rafael Santi.

Giovanni Santi headed the most famous art workshop in Urbino. The tragedy in which he lost his beloved wife and mother occurred at night in his home. While the artist was in Rome, where he was painting a portrait of Pope John II, his brother Niccolò, in a fit of insanity, killed his elderly mother and seriously wounded the pregnant Maggia, the artist’s wife. The guards who arrived at the crime scene arrested the criminal, but he managed to escape. Seized with insane fear, Niccolo threw himself off the bridge into the icy river. The soldiers stood on the shore and tried to fish out the body when Majia Santi had already given birth to a baby and died from her wounds. Giovanni learned about the trouble from traveling traders. Having abandoned everything, he hurried home. But friends and neighbors have already christened the boy Raphael, buried his wife and mother.

The childhood of the great artist was very happy and carefree. Giovanni Santi, having survived a terrible tragedy, invested all his strength in Raphael, protecting him from worries and troubles real world, warned possible mistakes and corrected those already committed. Since childhood, Raphael studied only with the best teachers; his father had high hopes for him, instilling a taste for painting. The first toys Raphael there were paints and brushes from my father's workshop. And already at seven years old, Rafael Santi he expressed his gifted magical fantasies in the workshop of a court painter - in the workshop of his father. Soon Giovanni remarried Bernardina Parte, the daughter of a goldsmith. From his second marriage a daughter, Elisabette, was born.

Every day the boy brought more and more joy. Giovanni watched how his son thought and acted in his fictional world, and how these weak and still clumsy hands expressed everything on canvas. He understood that talent and supernatural abilities Raphael much more worthy than his own, so he sent the boy to study with his friend, the artist Timoteo Viti.

During the training period, a ten-year-old Raphael for the first time he departed from the canons of the classical Italian portrait of the Renaissance and mastered that unique play of colors and paints, which today is a mystery for artists and art critics around the world.

In 1494, the father of the little genius died of a heart attack, and by decision of the city magistrate, the boy remained in the care of the family of the cloth merchant Bartholomew. He was the younger brother of the artist Giovanni and, unlike the crazy Niccolo, he was sociable, had a caring, cheerful and kind disposition, did not remain indifferent and was always ready to help those who needed it. This good-natured merchant adored his orphan nephew and spared no expense on his painting education.

Already at the age of seventeen, he easily created brilliant, talented works that still delight his contemporaries. In November 1500, a seventeen-year-old youth left his small provincial town Urbino and moved to the bustling port city of Perugio. There he entered the workshop of the famous painter Pietro Vannucci, known under the name Perugino. Having looked at the first examination papers of his new student, the gray-haired maestro exclaimed: “Today is a joyful day for me, because I have discovered a genius for the world!”

During the Renaissance, Perugino's workshop was a creative laboratory in which brilliant individuals were trained. Perugino's deep lyricism, his tenderness, calmness and gentleness found an echo in the soul Raphael. Raphael is overbearing. He quickly learns the painting style of his teacher, studies under his guidance the work on frescoes, becomes familiar with the technique and figurative system monumental painting.


Poplar wood, oil. 17.1 × 17.3


Canvas (translated from wood), tempera. 17.5×18


Around 1504.

Oil on poplar panel. 17×17

For some time, Raphael was still under the powerful influence of Perugino. Only timidly, like a momentary splash, does the unexpected suddenly arise compositional solution, unusual for Perugino. Suddenly the colors on the canvases begin to sound unique. And, despite the fact that his masterpieces of this period are imitative, one cannot stand aside and not realize what their immortal master did. First of all, it is "", "", "". All this is completed by the created monumental canvas “” in the city of Civita - Castellan.

This is like his last bow to the teacher. Raphael goes into big life.

In 1504, he arrived in Florence, where the center of Italian art was concentrated, where the High Renaissance was born and rose.

The first thing the young man saw Raphael, setting foot on the soil of Florence, there was a majestic statue of the biblical hero David in Piazza della Signoria. This sculpture by Michelangelo could not help but stun Raphael, could not help but leave an imprint on his impressionable imagination.

At this time, the great Leonardo also worked in Florence. Just then, all of Florence watched with bated breath the duel of the titans - Leonardo and Michelangelo. They worked on battle compositions for the Council Hall of the Palace of the Signoria. Leonardo's painting was supposed to depict the battle of the Florentines with the Milanese at Anghiari in 1440. And Michelangelo wrote the battle of the Florentines with the Pisans in 1364.

Already in 1505, Florentines had the opportunity to evaluate both cardboards exhibited together.

Poetic, majestic Leonardo and rebellious, with a dazzling passion for painting Michelangelo! A real titanic battle of the elements. Young Rafael you need to come out of the fire of this battle unscorched, remaining yourself.

In Florence, Raphael masters the entire amount of knowledge that an artist needs to rise to the level of these titans.

He studies anatomy, perspective, mathematics, geometry. His search for the beautiful in Man, his worship of Man emerges more and more clearly, he develops the style of a monumentalist, his skill becomes virtuosic.

In four years, he transformed from a timid provincial painter into a real master, confidently mastering all the school secrets he needed for his work.

In 1508, a twenty-five-year-old Santi arrives at the invitation of Pope Julius II to Rome. He is entrusted with painting in the Vatican. First of all, it was necessary to make frescoes in the Signature Hall, which was allocated by Julius II for a library and office. The paintings were supposed to reflect various aspects of human spiritual activity - in science, philosophy, theology, and art.

Stanza della Segnatura. 1509 - 1511

Stanza della Segnatura. 1509 -1511

Here he is before us not only a painter, but an artist - a philosopher who dared to rise to enormous generalizations.

The Hall of the Signature - Stanza della Segnatura - reunited the ideas of the era about the power of the human mind, the power of poetry, the rule of law, and humanity. The artist brought together philosophical ideas in live scenes.

In historical and allegorical groups Santi revives the images of Plato, Aristotle, Diogenes, Socrates, Euclid, Ptolemy. Monumental works required the master to know the most complex painting techniques - fresco, mathematical calculations and a steel hand. It was truly a titanic work!

In their stanzas (rooms) Rafael managed to find an unprecedented synthesis of painting and architecture. The fact is that the interiors of the Vatican were very complex in design. The artist was faced with almost impossible compositional problems. But Santi emerged victorious from this test.

The stanzas are masterpieces not only in terms of the plastic design of the figures, the characteristics of the images, and the color. In these frescoes, the viewer is amazed by the grandeur of the architectural ensembles created by the painter’s brush, created by his dream of beauty.

In one of the frescoes of the Signature Hall, among the philosophers and educators, as if a participant in this high debate, there is himself Rafael Santi. A thoughtful young man looks at us. Large, beautiful eyes, deep gaze. He saw everything: both joy and sorrow - and better than others he felt the Beauty that he left for people.

Raphael was the most magnificent portrait painter of all times. Images of his contemporaries Pope Julius II, Baltasar Castiglione, portraits of cardinals They depict to us proud, wise and strong-willed people of the Renaissance. The plasticity, color, and sharpness of the characteristics of the images on these canvases are amazing.

Wood, oil. 108 x 80.7

Canvas, oil. 82 x 67

Wood, oil. 63 x 45

Canvas, oil. 82 × 60.5

Around 1518. 155 x 119

Wood, oil. 63 x 45

In general, during his short thirty-seven-year life, the master created many unsurpassed, unique paintings. But still, the most important thing remains the inspired Madonnas, who are distinguished by their special mysterious beauty. Beauty, Kindness, and Truth are intertwined in them.

Painting " Holy Family. Madonna with Beardless Joseph“or “,” written at the age of twenty-three, represents a kind of creative “exercise” of the artist, who solved the problem of constructing a composition that was perfectly coordinated in all its parts.

Its center is marked by the figure of the Child. Highlighted by a beam of light directed directly at her, she, the brightest spot in the picture, immediately attracts the viewer’s attention. What is truly remarkable is the persistence and determination with which Santi consistently achieves the impression of an internal relationship between the characters and their spatial environment. The baby sits on Mary's lap, but his gaze is turned towards Joseph - usual for Raphael a compositional technique with which it is possible to strengthen the connection between adjacent figures not only visually, but also emotionally. Purely pictorial techniques serve the same purpose. Thus, the smooth parabolic lines outlined in the outlines of the Virgin Mary’s sleeve find an echo both in the outline of the figure of the Child and in the movement of the folds of Joseph’s cloak.

Madonna and Child - one of the leitmotifs in art Raphael: in just four years of his stay in Florence, he painted at least one and a half dozen paintings varying this plot. The Mother of God sometimes sits with the Baby in her arms, sometimes plays with him or simply thinks about something, looking at her son. Sometimes a little John the Baptist is added to them.

Canvas (translated from wood), oil. 81 x 56

Board, oil. 27.9 x 22.4

Around 1506.

Board, oil. 29 x 21

Thus, “”, written by him in 1512 - 1513, received the highest recognition. The mother holds the child in her arms and carries him to us, into our world. Holy Sacrament it happened - a man was born. Now life is before him. Gospel story- this is only a pretext for a solution through a complex allegory of an eternal idea. Life for the human being entering it is not only joy, but also quests, falls, ups, and suffering.

A woman carries her son into a cold and scary world full of accomplishments and joy. She is a mother, she anticipates the fate of her son, everything that is in store for him. She sees his future, so in her eyes there is horror, horror of the inevitable, and grief, and fear for her baby.

And yet she does not stop at the earthly threshold, she crosses it.

The Baby's face is most striking. Peering into the eyes of the Baby, unusually bright, brilliant, almost frightening to the viewer, the impression is not only of a menacing, but of something wild and “obsessed” with a meaningful look. This is God, and like God, he is also privy to the secret of his future, he also knows what awaits him in this world into which the curtain has opened. He clings to his mother, but does not seek protection from her, but as if says goodbye to her, as soon as he enters this world and accepts the full weight of the trials.

The weightless flight of the Madonna. But another moment - and she will step on the ground. She hands people the most precious thing - her son, a new person. Accept him, people, he is ready to accept mortal torment for you. This is the main idea that the artist expressed in painting.

It is this idea that awakens good feelings in the viewer, connects Santi with top names, elevates him as an artist to unattainable heights.

In the middle of the 18th century, the Benedictines sold " Sistine Madonna"to Elector Frederick Augustus II, in 1754 it ended up in the collection of the Dresden National Gallery. " Sistine Madonna"became an object of worship for all mankind. It began to be called the Greatest and Immortal picture of the world.

The image of pure beauty can be seen in the portrait "". "" was painted by the artist during his stay in Florence. The image of a young beautiful girl he created is full of charm and virginal purity. This impression is also associated with the mysterious animal lying peacefully on her lap - a unicorn, a symbol of purity, female purity and chastity.

For a long time " Lady with a unicorn"was attributed either to Perugino or to Titian. It was only in the 1930s that Raphael’s authorship was discovered and confirmed. It turned out that the artist initially depicted a lady with a dog, then a mythical creature - a unicorn - appeared on her lap.

The beautiful stranger depicted Raphael, seems to be a “deity”, a “shrine”. She is in boundless harmony with the world that surrounds her.

This job Raphael like a kind of dialogue between the genius of the Renaissance and Leonardo da Vinci, who has just created his famous “ Mona Lisa", which managed to make a deep impression on the young artist.

Using the lessons of Leonardo, the Master of Madonnas follows the teacher. He places his model in space on the balcony and against the backdrop of the landscape, dividing the plane into different zones. The portrait of the depicted model conducts a dialogue with the viewer, creating new imagery and revealing its different, not ordinary inner world.

The color scheme in a portrait also plays a huge role. A colorful and bright palette, built on a gradation of light and pure colors, gives the landscape a clear transparency, imperceptibly shrouded in a light, foggy haze. All this further emphasizes the integrity and purity of the landscape against the background of the image of the lady.

Fresco with tempera paints on wood " Transfiguration", which Raphael began writing in 1518 by order of Cardinal Giulio de' Medici for the Cathedral of Narbonne, can be perceived as the artist's artistic commandment.

The canvas is divided into two parts. The plot of the Transfiguration is presented at the top. The Savior with raised hands, in fluttering righteous clothes, hovers against the background of a haze illuminated by the brilliance of His own radiance. On both sides of Him, also floating in the air, are Moses and Elijah - the elders; the first, as already noted, with tablets in hands. At the top of the mountain, the blinded Apostles lie in different poses: they cover their faces with their hands, unable to bear the light emanating from Christ. On the left on the mountain there are two outside witnesses to the miracle of the Transfiguration, one of them has a rosary. Their presence does not find justification in the gospel story and was apparently dictated by some considerations of the artist unknown to us now.

There is no feeling of miracle and grace of Favorian light in the picture. But there is a feeling of emotional oversaturation of people, which overlaps the miraculous phenomenon itself.

In the lower half of the picture at the foot of the mountain Santi depicted two animated groups of people: on the left - the other nine Apostles, on the right - a crowd of Jews, in which in the foreground one can see a kneeling woman and a Jew supporting a possessed boy, whose strong writhing, clouded eyes and open mouth reveal his heavy spiritual and physical suffering. The crowd begs the Apostles to cure the demoniac. The apostles look at him in amazement, unable to alleviate his fate; some of them point to Christ.

If you look closely at the face of Christ, which Raphael wrote on the eve of his death, and compare it with the “” artist, you can find some similarities.

1506. Wood, tempera. 47.5 x 33

Rafael Santi- The Great Artist with a cheerful and kind disposition died unexpectedly on a spring evening, at the age of thirty-seven. He left this world full of divine beauty after a short illness on April 6, 1520 in his workshop. It seemed that art died along with the Great and Revered Artist. According to Raphael Santi's will, he was buried among the great people of Italy in the Pantheon.

Raphael Santi was born in the city of Urbino in 1483, on April 6. His interest in painting began quite early. His father Giovanni Santi worked as a court painter for the Duke of Urbino, Federigo da Montefeltro. During the time that Raphael was with his father, he had the opportunity to study the basics of painting. At the age of 8, Rafael lost his mother, and at 11, his father. Thanks to the care of the stepmother and a sufficient amount Money, which remained after the death of his father, the master never fought for his worthy existence. In addition, he was friends with the Italian masters of that time. Through these connections, Rafael was able to become quite successful in his career quite early on.

His father, while he was still alive, apparently managed to provide training for the young master. In 1500, Raphael became a student of Pietro Perugino, who was a successful artist in the city of Perugia. Within four years, Raphael had mastered Perugino's technique so well that it became almost impossible to distinguish between their works. By December of the same year, Raphael had earned the title of master from some quarters. His first famous work there was an altarpiece for a church that was halfway between the city of his birth and Perugia. He was assisted by his senior comrade Evangelista Pian di Meleto. The artist worked on many other projects with Raphael's father. The young master continued to work as an assistant to Perugino until he moved to Florence.

In Florence it became obvious to him that his style needed some changes, given the latest innovative styles of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. However, the artist who influenced him most undoubtedly remained the same. His influence can be seen in Raphael's painting The Sistine Madonna. However, although he adopted the styles of various masters of the time, he continued to use his own unique style. A work in which one could already see more of the style characteristic of Raphael - “The Beautiful Gardener” (La Belle Jardinire) or “Madonna and Child with John the Baptist,” as it is also called.

In 1508, Raphael moved to work for the Vatican in Rome. He lived the rest of his life here. His influential family connections also played a huge role in his invitation to the Vatican. With the assistance of his uncle Donato Bramante (a famous architect and painter of the time), Rafael Santi became the official artist of the papal court. He, at the invitation of Pope Julius II, arrives to complete the order of frescoing the Stanza della Segnatura, first before Michelangelo, who receives an official invitation a few months later. Raphael's first commissioned work in Rome was his largest and highest paying commission ever. He was to paint frescoes in what was to become the library of Julius II in the Vatican Palace. There were already similar works in different rooms, but they were mostly painted over, as they were commissioned by the predecessor and worst enemy of Pope Julius II, Rodrigo Borgia, Pope Alexander VI. The works of Raphael in this room were one of best works artist. These include Parnassus, School of Athens, Disputa, Virtues and Law.

In order to write these famous works, he had to paint over some other work. However, Pope Julius II decided that these works were less important. After completing the work in the first room, Pope Julius II was very impressed and decided to commission the artist to paint in another room for further work. The second room in which Raphael worked is called Stanza d'Eliodoro. In this room, Raphael mainly focuses on God's protection of human activity. The influence of Michelangelo is clearly visible in these works. However, as has been the case throughout his career, the artist manages to use his own style, while still using many techniques from other masters. At one time, Michelangelo was quite irritated by Raphael's unique skill in quickly adopting the techniques of other artists. He even accused the artist of plagiarism.


While Raphael was working on the second hall, Pope Julius II died. However, this did not affect his work in any way. The next Pope Leo X was also delighted with Raphael's skill and supported the continuation of the painting. In addition, his complex network of friends played a significant role in providing the artist with orders, in such quantities that he would probably never be left without work. Rafael Santi continued to work on the project, but played a smaller role in it. To complete it, he began to send a team of his assistants. Its big and complex work for him, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo came to define the century in which they lived.

At the end of his life, Raphael continued to receive a salary from the Vatican. However, he also received numerous other orders. His most notable projects outside the Vatican are a series of altarpieces and Roman Madonnas. These works demonstrate an evolution in Raphael's style. In fact, he continued to develop until his death. In addition, he made a series of portraits. Among them are portraits of Pope Julius II and his successor.

His studio has been described as one of the largest ever owned by a craftsman. Undoubtedly, he adopted much of the experience of running a workshop from his father. Unlike the workshop organized by Michelangelo, Raphael's workshop worked more quickly and productively.

The artist managed not only to organize a whole subcontract of craftsmen and their assistants, but also to maintain good working relationships with all of them. His workshop was credited with developing the talent of some of the greatest masters of the time.

When Bramante died, Raphael was appointed chief architect of St. Peter's Basilica. In 1515 he also received the position of chief custodian of antiquities. Most of his works were subsequently demolished as they were, to some extent, gloomy. However, some of his works as an architect are still preserved in Rome.

Raphael often drew pictures, sometimes using a silver tip. A drawing made in this way is initially bluish-gray in color. Gradually, after oxidation, it acquires a brownish tint. As can be seen from his numerous drawings, he was a very innovative artist. Raphael never made copies of his works, but willingly collaborated with other artists and allowed them to use his sketches to create engravings.

The artist has never been married. For some time he was infatuated with Margherita Luti (Fornarina - baker), the daughter of a rich baker.

According to one version, numerous noisy games with his mistresses led to his premature death at thirty-seven years old. But still, this version is the subject of serious controversy. According to another version, he fell ill after having sex with Fornarina. But if we take into account the large amount of work that the artist performed, the morals of those times, general state the health of the population of that century and the fact that then people generally did not live long, it can be assumed that all this together, in general, could have been the cause of Raphael’s early death. In any case, after so many hundreds of years since his death, one can now only speculate about its cause, since some biographical facts remain unknown, and instead of them many conjectures, rumors, fantasies and conjectures have appeared. The artist bequeathed his considerable fortune to Margarita Luti, friends and students. After his death, Raphael was buried in the Pantheon, at his own request.

Without a doubt, Raphael is one of the leading artists of the Renaissance. Together with Titian, Donatello, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Shakespeare, and a small group of contemporaries, Raphael became the center of a movement of artistic figures who enriched not only Western but also world culture with their masterpieces.


"Sistine Madonna". The painting measures 196 cm x 265 cm and was done in oil on canvas in 1514. Located in the Old Masters Gallery, Dresden, Germany.


“The Beautiful Gardener” (Madonna with Child and John the Baptist), measuring 80 cm. 122 cm. Made in oil on panel around 1507. Located in the Louvre, Paris.


"Madonna and the Goldfinch." The painting measures 77 cm x 107 cm and was done in oil on panel in 1506. Located in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy.


"Madonna in Green" (Belvedere Madonna). The painting measures 88 cm x 113 cm and was done in oil on panel in 1506. Located in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, Austria.



"Madonna Conestabile". The painting measures 18 cm x 17.5 cm, made in oil in 1504, transferred from wood to canvas. Located in the State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg.


"Madonna in a Chair" The painting measures 71 cm x 71 cm and was done in oil in 1514. Located in Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy.


"Madonna Granduca" The painting measures 55.9 cm x 84.4 cm and was done in oil on panel in 1504. Located in the Palatine Gallery of Palazzo Pitti, Florence.



"Madonna Alba". The painting is in tondo shape, measuring 94.5 cm x 94.5 cm, painted in 1511, and transferred in oil to canvas. Located in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA.


"Madonna Tempi" The painting measures 51 cm x 75 cm and was done in oil on panel in 1507. Located in the Alte Pinakothek art gallery, Munich, Germany.


"Madonna Foligno". The painting measures 194 cm x 320 cm, made in 1512, transferred in oil to canvas. Located in the Vatican Pinacoteca.


"Three Graces". The painting measures 17 cm x 17 cm and was done in oil on panel in 1504. Located in the Condé Museum, Chantilly, France.


"Cardinal Bibbiena". The portrait measures 76 cm x 107 cm, painted in oil on panel, around 1516, located in Palazzo Pitti.


The portrait of Baldassare Castiglione (Count of Novilara, Italian writer) measures 67 cm x 82 cm, executed in oil on panel around 1515, now in the Louvre, Paris.


"Lady with a Unicorn" The portrait of a woman measures 61 cm x 65 cm, executed in oil on panel around 1506, located in the Galleria Borghese, Rome.


"Julius II". The portrait of the 216th Pope Giuliano della Rovere measures 81 cm x 108 cm, executed in oil on panel in 1511, located in the London National Gallery, Great Britain.


"Fornarina". The portrait presumably depicts Raphael's beloved woman. Its size is 60 cm x 85 cm. It was painted in oil on panel in 1519. Located in Palazzo Barberini, Rome.


"The School of Athens". The fresco measuring 770 cm x 500 cm was painted in 1511 in Stanza della Segnatura, in the Vatican Palace (Apostolic Palace in the Vatican).


"Parnassus". The fresco, 670 cm wide, was painted in 1511 in the Stanza della Segnatura, in the Vatican Palace.


"Disputation". The fresco measures 770 cm x 500 cm, painted in 1510 in Stanza della Segnatura.


"Virtues and Law". The fresco is 660 cm wide and was painted between 1508 and 1511. in Stanza della Segnatura.