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Around
1508, Pope Julius II hired a young artist named Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino to
do some frescoing in one of his apartments.
He ended up liking the frescoes so much that the job was expanded to
further rooms, eventually resulting in the decoration of four apartments now
known as the Raphael
Rooms. The project outlived Julius, but was continued
without interruption under his successor, Pope Leo X, starting in 1513. It also turned out to outlive Raphael, who
died prematurely in 1520, and the last room was done by his workshop, with
little surviving input from Raphael himself.
The
first room Raphael worked on eventually came to be known as the Stanza della Segnatura. The first fresco was called The Disputation of the Holy Sacrament,
or Disputa for short, a marvel of
composition and execution depicting both heaven and earth.
The Disputation of the Holy Sacrament
HD Video (16.1 MB) SD Video (3.2 MB)
The Disputation of the Holy Sacrament | The Disputation of the Holy Sacrament |
The Disputation of the Holy Sacrament | The Disputation of the Holy Sacrament |
The
second fresco, on the wall opposite the Disputa,
is possibly the most famous of all the works done by Raphael, and is called The School of Athens. It depicts a school full of famous ancient
Greek philosophers, some of which were done in the image of well-known artists
of the Italian Renaissance. For example,
Plato was painted to look like Leonardo da Vinci, and Euclid was played by Donato Bramante, first
architect of the new St. Peter’s Basilica.
Raphael also includes a portrait of himself, in a group on the
right. Sometime during the work on this
fresco, Raphael got a peek at the work going on in the nearby Sistine Chapel,
and couldn’t help adding an additional figure to The School of Athens – the lone figure of Heraclitus, played by
Michelangelo. Also at this point,
Raphael’s work started to become more dramatic and less static, probably
influenced by Michelangelo’s work.
The School of Athens HD Video (10.8 MB) SD Video (1.6 MB) | The School of Athens |
The School of Athens - Plato and Aristotle | The School of Athens - Pythagoras, Heraclitus, etc. |
The School of Athens | Ceiling, Stanza della Segnatura |
The
other frescoes in this room were The
Parnassus, which depicts the Mountain residence of Apollo, and The Cardinal and Theological Virtues, thought
to be designed by Raphael but executed by his workshop.
Work
on the second apartment began in 1511.
This room became known as the Stanza
di Eliodoro, being named after the most well-known fresco in it, The Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple. This fresco depicts angels tossing Heliodorus
out of the Temple
of Jerusalem, where he’d
gone to try to seize its valuables.
Julius II appears on the left this fresco, observing the action.
The Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple
HD Video (9.0 MB) SD Video (1.8 MB)
The Deliverance of St. Peter, also in this room, depicts St. Peter being freed
from jail by an angel.
The Deliverance of St. Peter
SD Video (2.5 MB)
The
other frescoes in this room include The
Mass at Bolsena and a battle fresco, The
Meeting of Leo the Great and Attila.
By
1514, when work started on the third room (the Stanza dell’Incendio del Borgo), Raphael, who had been delegating
more and more of the work to his assistants, seems to have mostly lost interest
in the project. He provided a drawing on
which one of the frescoes was based and possibly helped design another, but
left his assistants on their own for the other two. All four frescoes were executed by the
assistants.
The
first fresco, from which the room gets its name, is known as The Fire in the Borgo. It depicts a fire in the Borgo section of Rome in 847, and the
miraculous containment of it through a benediction by Pope Leo IV. The second fresco depicts The Battle of Ostia, an 849 naval battle
between the Saracens and a league of Christian states. Pope Leo IV appears in this fresco as well,
looking uncannily like Pope Leo X. The
other two frescoes feature Pope Leo III, who also strongly resembles Leo
X. They depict The Coronation of Charlemagne, which happened on Christmas Day in
800, and The Oath of Leo III, depicting
the Pope taking an oath of purgation (also in 800) after having been accused of
misconduct.
The Coronation of Charlemagne
The
last of the Raphael
Rooms is the largest and
had very little to do with Raphael, partly because his attention was largely on
other things, and partly because he died part way through its completion. The room is called The Hall of Constantine,
and frescoes in this room depict scenes from the emperor Constantine’s
victories over paganism. The frescoes
are called The Vision of the Cross, The Battle of Milvian Bridge, The Donation of Constantine and The Baptism of Constantine. The Pope at this time in history was Pope
Sylvester, and in his depiction in the frescoes, he refreshingly doesn’t look
like Leo X. Coincidentally, Leo X died
before the frescoes were finished, and his successor, Clement VII apparently
did bear a Popely resemblance to Sylvester.
The Baptism of Constantine | The Battle of Milvian Bridge |
Frescoes, Hall of Constantine | Fresco, Hall of Constantine |
The
order in which we went through the rooms was not the order listed above. Visitors are herded past all of the rooms,
and then brought back through them, first through the Hall of Constantine,
second through the Stanza di Eliodoro,
then through the Stanza della Segnatura,
and finally through the Stanza
dell’Incendio del Borgo. From there,
the hallway leads in one inexorable direction, toward the grand finale of the
visit to the Vatican Museums – the Sistine Chapel.
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