How raphael personifies the renaissance

How raphael personifies the renaissance

Thesis Statement
In my research, I have seen how Raphael individually personifies what the High Renaissance encircles.

RAPHAEL OUTLINE
I. Early Life
A. Childhood
B. Family
C. Father as court painter D. Study in Perugia.

II. Florentine Period
A. Study under Leonardo da Vinci
B. Works that he did while in Florence.
C. Interaction with Michelangelo and other artists.

III. Roman Period
A. Worked for Pope Julius II in Rome.
B. Worked for Pope Leo X in Rome as well.
C. Worked on many papal buildings.

IV. Humanist
A. Final Works.
B. Feelings for nature and people.






While we may term other works paintings. Those of Raphael are living things; the flesh palpitates, the breath comes and goes, every organ lives, life pulses everywhere (Vasari, Web Museum 1)

On April 6, 1483, in Urbino, Italy, a man of a new age came into the world, Raphael Sanzio. Starting in his most formable years, art and poetry came into his life by way of his father Giovanni, a court painter to the Duke of Urbino. Giovanni, the first actual master of Raphael, taught him about the arts and all of the components of painting. For the first ten years of his life his father influenced his feelings on the arts. In 1494, he traveled to Perugia to study under Peitro Perugino. Just as his father influenced his early life, his study in Perugia shaped his adolescence and young adulthood even further.
In Perugia, Raphael began to take a particular liking to the field of art. Perugino influenced the way that Raphael thought about art and also helped him form a style of his own. These years in the life of Raphael proved to be his most impressionable. Perugino taught the basic laws of painting to the young Raphael and showed him what art really was. At this time in Raphael’s life his works mimicked those of Perugino, but still many say that his works breathed an independence of their own. Raphael, had a precious talent right from the beginning and was an innate absorber of influences (Web Museum 2).
In many of Raphael’s early works of art he echoes the style of Perguino, like that in the painting St. George and the Dragon. The style of Raphael in his early twenties proved in many aspects to far exceed those of Perugino.
Raphael took a journey to Florence in 1504 to learn more about the happenings taking place in the fastest growing portion of Italy. While in Florence, he embraced new methods and techniques, adopted from those of Leonardo da Vinci. From da Vinci, Raphael learned how to balance and individualize his figures in every work that he would fabricate from that day forward. Raphal’s paintings now took on a much more vibrant and electric approach.
Raphael took a special liking to Mary, the Virgin Mother of...

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