Barbara's Heritage - Young Americans Among the Old Italian Masters by Deristhe L. Hoyt
page 162 of 240 (67%)
page 162 of 240 (67%)
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"I wish," he continued, "I could go on like this through a list of
Raphael's works with you, but it is utterly impossible, so many are there. When he went to Florence, where you know he spent some years, he fell under the influence of the Florentine artists, and his work gradually lost its resemblance to Perugino's. It gained more freedom, action, grace, and strength of color. Some examples of this second style of his painting are the _Madonna del Cardellino_, or Madonna of the Goldfinch, which you will remember in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence, and _La Belle Jardinière_ in the Louvre, Paris. But I have brought photographs of these pictures so that you may see the striking difference between them and those previously painted." Murmured exclamations attested the interest with which the comparison was made. After all seemed satisfied, Mr. Sumner continued:-- "After Raphael came to Rome, summoned by the same Pope Julius II. who sent for Michael Angelo, and was thus brought under the influence of that great painter, his method again changed. It grew firmer and stronger. Then he painted his best pictures,--and so many of them! So, you can see, it is somewhat difficult to characterize Raphael's work as a whole, for into it came so many influences. One thing, however, is true. From all those whom he followed, he gathered only the best qualities. His work deservedly holds its prominent place in the world's estimation;--so high and sweet and pure are its _motifs_, while their rendering is in the very best manner of the High Renaissance. No other artist ever painted so many noble pictures in so few years of time." "Did not his pupils assist him in many works, uncle?" asked Malcom, as his uncle paused for a moment. |
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