by Albert Turoń
Nationality
Italian
Lifetime
1483-1520
Biography
Raffaello Sanzio (Urbino, April 6, 1483-Rome, April 6, 1520), commonly known as Raphael, was one of the most admired Italian painters and architects on the High Renaissance. He was trained in his native city Urbino, a center of art and culture during the rule of the Duke Federico da Montefeltro. Around 1495, Raphael moved to Perugia and joined the master Pietro Perugino's workshop. He later sojourned to Siena, and then resided in Florence by the autumn of 1504. There, Raphael studied the works by Renaissance masters such as Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Fra Bartolomeo, and Masaccio. Raphael is best known for his paintings of Madonnas (from 1504 through 1507), and the frescoes that Pope Julio II commissioned to him in the Vatican Palace in Rome in 1514. The same year architect Donato Bramante died, and the pope appointed Raphael chief architect. Raphael's style was based on clarity of forms and harmonious compositions; after his death, his works were highly admired by both Mannerist and Baroque artists.
Artworks
Studies of a Seated Female, Child's Head...
Raphael
The Birth of Venus
Marco Dente
Sibyl Reading with a Child Holding a Tor...
Ugo da Carpi
Apollo on Parnassus
Marcantonio Raimondi
The Massacre of the Innocents (Without t...
Venus Wounded by a Rose's Thorn
Antonio Salamanca
Descent from the Cross
Copy of Raphael's Massacre of the Innoce...
The Pieta'
Neptune Calming the Tempest That Aeolus ...
Massacre of the Innocents (With the Fir ...
Christ, the Virgin, and St. John the Bap...
The Miraculous Draught of Fishes
Madonna of the Palm Tree
The Wine Press
St. George and the Dragon (3)
Claude-Ferdinand Gaillard
St. George and the Dragon (4)
St. George and the Dragon (1)
St. George and the Dragon (2)
Massacre of the Innocents without the Fi...
The Virgin Fainting in the Arms of Three...
Giulio Bonasone