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Portrait of Pope Julius II is an oil painting of 1511–1512 by the Italian High Renaissance painter Raphael.The portrait of Pope Julius II was unusual for its time and would carry a long influence on papal portraiture.
Raphael's, School of Athens (1509–1511), a fresco in the Raphael Rooms of the Apostolic Palace, Vatican. Pope Julius II (reigned 1503–1513), commissioned a series of highly influential art and architecture projects in the Vatican.
The Stanze, as they are commonly called, were originally intended as a suite of apartments for Pope Julius II. He commissioned Raphael, then a relatively young artist from Urbino , and his studio in 1508 or 1509 to redecorate the existing interiors of the rooms entirely.
The School of Athens (Italian: Scuola di Atene) is a fresco by the Italian Renaissance artist Raphael.It was painted between 1509 and 1511 as part of a commission by Pope Julius II to decorate the rooms now called the Stanze di Raffaello in the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City.
Nicknamed the Warrior Pope, the Battle Pope or the Fearsome Pope, it is often speculated that he had chosen his papal name not in honor of Pope Julius I but in emulation of Julius Caesar. One of the most powerful and influential popes, Julius II was a central figure of the High Renaissance and left a significant cultural and political legacy. [ 1 ]
The fresco was part of Raphael's commission to decorate the private apartments of Pope Julius II. These rooms are now known as the Stanze di Raffaello . After completing his three monumental frescoes Disputation of the Holy Sacrament , The Parnassus , and The School of Athens in the Stanza della Segnatura, in 1511 Raphael painted the Cardinal ...
The connection between Averroes’s commentaries on Aristotle and Raphael’s depiction of Aristotle goes, however, much deeper. Why Is a 12th Century Muslim Jurist Depicted in a 16th Century Pope ...
It was inspired by a passage in the biography of Raphael written by Quatremère de Quincy. Raphael is shown at a makeshift easel drawing a peasant woman with her child and surrounded by a crowd of attentive students while Michelangelo is shown in the bottom left corner. [3] Above them are Pope Julius II and Leonardo da Vinci. [4]