After Raphael (Urbino 1483-Rome 1520) - Studies of the heads and hands of two Apostles for 'The Transfiguration' (2024)

A photograph of an auxiliary cartoon by Raphael (c.1519-1520) now in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (inv. no. WA1846.209)forthe heads and hands of two apostles in The Transfiguration, a painting executed by Raphael (c.1518-1520) now in the Pinacoteca Vaticana, Rome (inv. no. 333).See RCIN 850327 for a photograph of the painting. Annotated on the verso.

Although there areno documents directly related to this commission, information about the genesis of The Transfiguration can be gathered from contemporary correspondence about the Raising of Lazarus, a painting by Sebastiano del Piombo now in the National Gallery, London (inv, no. NG1). Both paintings were commissioned c. 1516-17 by cardinal Giulio de Medici (the future Pope Clement VII) for the cathedral of Narbonne. Sebastiano started his painting earlier than Raphael and presented it to the Pope in 1519. According to Vasari, The Transfiguration was Raphael's last painting as he diedprematurely on 6 April 1520, by which time the paintingwas probably largely completed. The painting was never sent to Narbonne and from 1523 hung in the church of S. Pietro in Montorio, Rome until it was confiscated by the French in 1797 and taken to Paris.After thefall of Napoleon, thepainting was brought back to Italyand initially displayed in the Borgia Apartment, Vatican.

This painting depicts two different scenes: the Transfiguration of Christ on Mount Tabor (in the upper register) and the Healing of the possessed boy (in the lower register), which are based on two distinct passages from the Gospels of Matthew (17: 1-20), Mark (9: 2-29) and Luke (9: 28-43). Many drawings and 'modelli' for this painting survive, which are vital to understanding the genesis and finalisation of the pictorial programme.

Giorgio Vasari's opinion that The Transfiguration was the last painting that Raphael executed without the aid of his workshop was not disputed until the mid-eighteenth century, when scholars suggested that, after the death of Raphael, Giulio Romano completed the painting and was responsible for lower right half of the picture. However,restorationof the painting in the 1970sconfirmed Vasari's opinion and the painting is now generally considered to be by Raphael "except for a few small areas which were never completed" (see Bibliographic References for further discussion).

After Raphael (Urbino 1483-Rome 1520) - Studies of the heads and hands of two Apostles for 'The Transfiguration' (2024)
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