Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Raffaello Sanzio Essays - Raphael Rooms, Renaissance Art, Raphael
  Raffaello Sanzio  annon    During a time when Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci were the prime  artists in Europe, a young man by the name of Raffaello Sanzio was  starting to attract major attention with his artworks.    The Italian high renaissance was marked by paintings expressing human  grandeur and very humanistic values. No one better portrayed the Italian  high Renaissance then Raphael Sanzio, with his paintings clarity and ease  of composition, Raphael was easily one of the greatest painters of this  period.    Born in an artistically influenced town in Italy called Urbino, Raffaello    Sanzio was first taught by his father, Giovanni Santi, how to compose  works of art at a very early age. At the age of fourteen, Raphaels  father realized his sons potential and sent him to a very talented  teacher by the name of Pietro Perugino. Pietro Perugino lived from 1478  to 1520, and had a strong influence on Raphaels early artworks. Perugino  was a Umbrian painter who loved to incorporate beautiful landscapes into  his paintings. Raphaels early works resembled Peruginos so much that  paintings such as the Crucifixion with the Virgin, Saint John, Saint    Jerome, and Saint Mary Magdalene were thought to be Raphaels until the  church of San Gimingniano proved that they were in fact Peruginos.  Raphael was only 14. It is undoubtedly a Perugino calmly emotional, and  pious rather than passionate(Pioch). Unlike the other great painters of  this time such as Michelangelo and Da Vinci, Raphael was born with a great  understanding of art and required little instruction if any. Because of    Raphaels great understanding of the arts, he quickly surpassed his  teacher and ventured out on his own to the great city of Florence in 1504.    At the same time Raphael arrived in Florence, the other great painters of  time, Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci were the popular painters of the  city. Because of the competitive environment of Florence, Raphael adopted  many new painting techniques such as shading, anatomy, and frozen action.    Both Michelangelo and Da Vincis styles influenced Raphael while he was in    Florence. Raphaels energetic paintings with softness and balance such as  the Small Cauper Madonna, were influenced directly from Michelangelo.    While Raphael was in Florence, Duke Guidobaldo employed him to paint a  painting for King Henry VII of England. In the painting Saint George and  the Dragon, Raphael portrays Saint George as a brave warrior fighting  against a dragon right outside its lair. In contrast to the action of  the painting, the background is peaceful and serene. In the story of    Saint George, after the dragon is slain, the town all converts to    Christianity, symbolizing the triumph of Christianity over all. Raphael  stayed in Florence until he decided to go to Rome where he could branch  out and away from his two competitors.    Once in Rome, Raphael was immediately commissioned by Pope Julius II  because of his uncanny gift for painting sacred and secular paintings.    Julius II had Raphael paint the rooms of the Vatican apartment which  brought life to the otherwise dull walls of the stanze.    When Raphael arrived at the Vatican palace, Michelangelo was busy  painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Raphael started the stanze walls  around 1508 and didnt finish until 1511. Raphael had painted the walls  to celebrate the four aspects of human accomplishment: theology,  philosophy, arts, and law. To represent theology, was the Disputation of  the Sacrament. To represent philosophy was the famous School of    Athens, in which Raphael paints Michelangelo and himself in amongst the  philosophers. To represent the arts was Parnassus and finally to  represent law was Cardinal Virtues. When fused together, these four  aspects marked the transition from the middle ages to modern times.  (Taylor, 59)    After he finished the frescos in the Vatican Palace, Raphael went on to  fresco the Stanza dEliodoro between the years 1511 and 1514. Again    Raphael depicted four historical events that illustrated salvation by  divine intervention with his unparalleled gift for painting Christian  paintings.    Throughout Raphaels artistic career, he went back to paintings  portraying the Madonna and child many times. The Alba Madonna, was one  of Raphaels most famous Madonnas because it differed so much from  traditional Roman art. The Madonnas of this time were usually shown  sitting on a throne, but Raphael painted her in the middle of a field  which I think added a realism without shattering her queenly image.    Raphael also painted the Alba Madonna in a classic symmetrical triangle  which was consistent with the painting techniques of that time. Raphaels  painted more then forty Madonnas before his untimely death in 1520. (The    Metropolitan Museum of Art, 22)    After suffering in bed for fifteen days, Raphael Sanzio died on his  birthday at    
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