“Raphael: Sublime Poetry” at the Met Reunites Works with Their Historical Companions
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8 Articles
The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York (Met) opens the spring with a monumental exhibition, which has involved more than seven years of work and required loans from more than sixty museums and private collections from all over the world. Rafael: sublime poetry is the first great anthological dedicated to the Italian master in the USA; to the child prodigy, the Mozart of the Renaissance, who before the age of 25 was a Vatican painter and at h…
The new Met exhibition brings together more than 170 original works by Rafael, including unpublished tapestries in America and his iconic Madonas, in a retrospective exploring his genius
New York, 23 Mar (EFE).- The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Met) of New York has become since this week the world epicenter of the Renaissance with the inauguration of 'Rafael: Poetry Sublime', an ambitious retrospective with more than 170 works by Raffaello di Giovanni Santi (1483-1520) that not only celebrates the technical mastery of Urbino's master, but also comes to pass the historical debates on the authorship of his works.“With this exhibiti…
The Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana presents Memoriae Cartoni Raphaelis, an installation by artist Sidival Fila that "restored" the ancient Napoleonic canvas of Raphael's Cartoon with his artistic intervention. The work, in dialogue with the Urbino artist's masterpiece, joins the permanent collection of the Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana, precisely in the year that marks the anniversary of the Cartoon's acquisition by Federico Borromeo. The pro…
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York will present "Raphael: Sublime Poetry" from March 29 to June 28, the first major international loan exhibition of Raphael to the United States. Seven years in the making, the exhibition brings together more than 200 works from over 60 major institutions in Europe and the United States, including more than 170 works by Raphael himself. Covering drawings, paintings, tapestries, and decorative arts, the ex…
“Raphael: Sublime Poetry” at the Met Reunites Works with Their Historical Companions
The Italian Renaissance artist Raphael may have been called the “prince of painters,” but his masterful drawings were his calling card, even from a young age. We know him best today for paintings such as The Marriage of the Virgin (1504), The School of Athens (1509–11), and The Sistine Madonna (1512–13), but an exhibition opening this month at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art reminds us not to overlook his sketches, tapestries, and other ar…
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