Raphael was a famous Italian painter and architect from the High Renaissance, whose clear, calm images helped art become balanced and easy to read.

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Raphael was a famous Italian painter and architect who lived during the time called the High Renaissance, when art changed a lot and became very balanced and beautiful. People like his paintings because the shapes are clear, the pictures are easy to read, and the people he painted look calm and noble. He could arrange faces, bodies, and background so the whole picture felt like a peaceful scene.
Raphael is often mentioned with two other great artists, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. Together they are thought of as three of the most important artists of their time.
Raphael was born in Urbino, a small city in Italy, where his father worked as a court painter. When Raphael was eleven, his father died, and the young Raphael helped run the family workshop. This meant he learned how to mix paints, prepare panels, and copy drawings so the studio could keep working.
He probably trained with a painter named Perugino, who taught him careful drawing and soft light. By 1500 Raphael was already called a master. Early works like the Baronci Altarpiece (1500–1501) and the Mond Crucifixion (about 1503) show him painting Madonnas and portraits in a calm, clear style.
Raphael moved around as a young artist and spent important time in Florence, the city where many artists were inventing new ideas. A letter written in 1504 helped him study there; a noblewoman praised his talent and good manners and wanted him to learn from Florence’s art.
In Florence he studied what other painters were doing. He learned how to make figures look more alive and how to arrange groups of people in space. He mixed what he learned there with his earlier calm style, making paintings that felt both gentle and powerful.
When Raphael worked in Rome he used everything he had learned and painted very large wall pictures in the Pope’s rooms, called the Vatican Stanze (the Vatican Rooms). These wall paintings are frescos, which means the paint was applied onto wet plaster so the color became part of the wall.
In these frescos you can see ideas from Florence: figures posed in lively ways, soft blending of color to make skin look real (called sfumato), and balanced, pyramidal groups of people like in the Mona Lisa. He also kept the clear light he learned earlier, and he arranged glances and gestures so the people in his pictures seem to talk with their looks. These choices helped Raphael make big, calm scenes that feel like gentle stories.
St Peter's became one of Raphael’s big jobs after the older architect Bramante died in 1514. Raphael drew plans and ideas for the new church and worked like a builder and artist at the same time. Many of the parts he planned were changed or taken down after he died, so we do not see all of his ideas today.
A few of Raphael’s drawings for St Peter’s survive, and they help us imagine how he thought a great church should look. Later, another famous artist, Michelangelo, made the design that was finally used for the finished St Peter’s.
Raphael did more than paint—he planned houses and rooms in Rome too. He was one of the most important architects near the pope for some years, and the pope wanted new streets and splendid palaces along them. Raphael designed buildings like the little palace for Giovanni Battista Branconio; the palace’s faces and courtyard were drawn by him but the building was later removed to make space for Bernini’s big St Peter’s plaza.
He also designed the Chigi Chapel and made ideas for mosaics there. Some other houses he helped with, like a palace for Jacopo da Brescia, still survive though they were moved. Raphael lived near Bramante and worked close to the ancient parts of Rome, so old ruins often inspired him.
Vitruvius was an ancient Roman writer about building, and Raphael helped by translating his words into Italian so other artists could read them. Around 1510–1515 Raphael also helped protect old stones and writings in Rome. The pope gave him a job to watch over ancient things and to tell people not to break them up when they dug in the ground.
In the studio, Raphael painted on both wood and canvas and mixed his paints with drying oils like linseed oil or walnut oil so the colors would set. His bright palette used colors such as ultramarine (a deep blue), lead‑tin yellow, carmine, vermilion, madder lake, verdigris and ochres. Sometimes he used rare things like powdered gold or special red dyes. These choices made works like the Ansidei Madonna glow with color.
Drawings were very important to Raphael. He used quick sketches to plan faces and positions, and careful studies to show how light and shadow would fall. These drawings helped him prepare for big paintings and to capture how a person looked.
Some of his famous portrait drawings show Elisabetta Gonzaga (about 1504), Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (about 1509–1511), Pope Julius II (about 1512), Bindo Altoviti (about 1514), and Baldassare Castiglione (about 1515). Each drawing records a distinct face and tells us how Raphael watched people closely to make lifelike art.
Raphael lived in a large city house called Palazzo Caprini in Rome from 1517 until the end of his life. The building had been designed by the architect Bramante and stood in the busy area of the Borgo, at the corner of piazza Scossacavalli and via Alessandrina. Living there put Raphael close to the people and places that asked for his paintings and designs.
He never married, but in 1514 he became engaged to Maria Bibbiena. The wedding did not take place because she died in 1520. Raphael also died while he was still living at the Palazzo, bringing to a close the life of a famous artist who had worked in Rome for many years.
🎨 Raphael was an Italian painter and architect born in 1483 and died in 1520.
👨🎨 He is part of the traditional trio of High Renaissance masters with Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo.
🏛️ In 1508, Raphael moved to Rome to work on the Vatican's Apostolic Palace at the invitation of Pope Julius II.
🖼️ The Stanza della Segnatura in the Vatican is Raphael’s greatest series of rooms and includes The School of Athens.
🛠️ He ran a large workshop where assistants helped him finish many paintings.
🎭 The School of Athens features a portrait of Michelangelo depicted as the philosopher Heraclitus.


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