The ambitious new retrospective charts the Renaissance master’s rise from tiny Urbino to the Vatican, opening a door on his ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Scientists make 3-D reconstruction of face of Renaissance master Raphael ROME (Reuters) - Raphael probably didn't like his nose, ...
A survey of this giant of Renaissance art opens this month at the Met. Three experts show us why he matters as much as ...
According to Italian art critic and former undersecretary of cultural heritage Vittorio Sgarbi, writing in Corriere della Sera‘s magazine Sette, a painting currently attributed to the followers of ...
Whether painting popes or prostitutes, the artist got beneath his subjects’ skin to reveal their inner lives – and reinvent portraiture Alastair Sooke has been covering art for the Telegraph since ...
Raphael's famed Uffizi self-portrait and the new facial reconstruction Public domain / Tor Vergata University of Rome Five hundred years after Raphael’s passing, the Italian artist continues to make ...
When Santiago Calatrava's Quadracci Pavilion with the Burke Brise Soleil went up, the international art world took notice. The latest fruit of that phenomenon is the appearance here of influential ...
The famous Italian painter Raffaello Sanizo, or known as Raphael, died 500 years ago, but the site of his resting place has remained a mystery – until now. Scientists created a 3D reconstruction of ...
The painting measures less than 15 inches tall and just over 5 inches wide. The verso of the panel includes part of a Marian prayer. Sotheby's New York A tiny portrait of Mary Magdalene by Raphael has ...
ROME (Reuters) - Raphael probably didn't like his nose, and replaced it with an idealised version in his famous self-portrait. That is the conclusion of Rome University scientists who produced a 3D ...