The School of Athens
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| Image:Sanzio 01.jpg |
| The School of Athens |
| Raphael, 1509-1510 |
| fresco, 500 × 770 cm |
| Vatican City, Apostolic Palace |
The School of Athens is one of the most famous paintings by the Italian renaissance artist Raphael. It was painted between 1509 and 1510 as a part of Raphael's commission to decorate with frescoes the rooms that are now known as the Stanze di Raffaello, in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican. The Stanza della Segnatura was the first of the rooms to be decorated, and The School of Athens the second painting to be finished, after La disputa.
Because it was positioned over the philosophical section of the library of Pope Julius II, The School of Athens shows the greatest philosophers, scientists and mathematicians of classical antiquity. Plato and Aristotle, the Greek philosophers that were considered most important, are standing in the center of the composition at the top of the steps. Plato, a portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, is holding his Timaeus. Aristotle is carrying a copy of his Nichomachean Ethics. Their gestures correspond to their interests in the philosophical field - Plato is pointing upwards towards Heaven and Aristotle is gesturing towards the earth.
Diogenes is lying carefree on the steps before them to show his philosophical attitude: he despised all material wealth and the lifestyle associated with it. To the left, is a great block of stone the significance of which is sometimes connected with the first epistle of St Peter. It symbolizes Christ, the "cornerstone" which the builders have rejected, which becomes a stumbling block and a "rock of offence" to the unbeliever. The man leaning on the block is meant to be Michelangelo. This figure was an afterthought: it was not in the original cartoon. In 1510, Raphael snuck into the Sistine Chapel to view Michelangelo’s work on the ceiling by candle light. He was so awed by the unfinished work that he added Michelangelo in his own style of painting to show his respect for the artist.
Raphael's self portrait is at the far lower-right of the fresco, the young man with brown hair staring straight out at the audience. On the left of the painting a girl-like figure, dressed in white, is also staring out at the audience. Romantic legend has it that she is Raphael's love, Magherite. Other interpretations, however, claim that it is Hypatia of Alexandria, or a portrait of the young Francesco Maria I della Rovere.
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[edit] The philosophers
The identity of some of the philosophers in the picture, such as Plato or Aristotle, is uncontroversial, but scholars disagree on many of the other figures. They are usually identified as follows:<ref>The School of Athens, "Who is Who?" by Michael Lahanas</ref>
- Zeno of Citium
- Epicurus
- Frederick II, Duke of Mantua
- Averroes
- Pythagoras
- Alcibiades or Alexander the Great
- Francesco Maria I della Rovere or Hypatia of Alexandria
- Xenophon
- Socrates
- Michelangelo as Heraclitus
- Leonardo da Vinci as Plato
- Aristotle
- Diogenes
- Bramante as Euclid or Archimedes
- Strabo or Zoroaster
- Ptolemy
- Raphael as Apelles, with Il Sodoma as Protogenes before him
[edit] Reproductions
A reproduction of the fresco can be seen in the auditorium of Old Cabell Hall at the University of Virginia. Produced in 1900 by George W. Breck to replace an older reproduction that was destroyed in a fire in 1895, it is four inches off scale from the original, because the Vatican would not allow identical reproductions of its art works. <ref>Information on Old Cabell Hall from University of Virginia</ref>
[edit] References
<references />
[edit] External links
- The School of Athens at the Web Gallery of Art
- The School of Athens. Interactive Map.
- The School of Athens - original cartoon at the Ambrosiana Gallery, Milan
[edit] Gallery
Averroes and Pythagoras |
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Socrates (on the right) |
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fr:L'École d'Athènes ko:라파엘로의 방 id:Sekolah Athena it:La scuola di Atene (Raffaello Sanzio) jv:Sekolah Atena pt:Escola de Atenas sq:Shkolla e Athinës zh:雅典學院

