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Saturday, April 11, 2026

How Raphael Made—and Unmade—the Renaissance

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f6/Raffaello_Sanzio.jpg 

From ArtNet:

Raphael is one of those names that everyone knows. He is the prince of painters, a master of the High Renaissance. And the Metropolitan Museum of Art has given him the full blockbuster treatment in a highly anticipated exhibition called “Raphael: Sublime Poetry.”

The show is the first comprehensive international loan exhibition ever dedicated to him in the United States. There are 237 works in total—33 paintings, 142 drawings—and his Sistine Chapel tapestries. There are loans from the Louvre, the Vatican Museums, the Prado, the Uffizi, and the British Museum. Many of these works, according to the Met, have never been shown together, and some have never previously left Europe. Curated by Carmen C. Bambach, it took 17 years to assemble.

No one quite captured divine beauty like Raphael did. But what is the story within the story of this artist who left indelible mark on western art? I’m joined by art critic and podcast co-host Ben Davis, who has just published a review of the exhibition, to dive into that question. (Read more.)

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