Raphael Self Portrait 1506 c. Palazzo Pitti, Author Provided (no reuse) |
Raphael, The Alba Madonna, c. The National Gallery, London, Author Provided (No reuse) |
Raphael’s style, according
to Vasari, results from his remarkable capacity to keep learning, to transcend
his own limitations, to create a harmonious, middle way that synthesises the
innovations of other painters. Raphael is
celebrated by Vasari because he is not just an imitator – he recognises that he
cannot match some of the achievements of Leonardo and Michelangelo and
therefore he abandons his attempt to imitate them. Instead he creates a syncretic style which is
fully his – his own genius.
Lastly, Vasari
credits Raphael with a particular gift – the capacity to live and work with
other artists – whose natural disposition is anything but cooperative – and to
motivate them to collaborate harmoniously.
Just as Raphael, the painter, could blend the styles of others in his
painting, as a master of works he led collaborative teams that worked
harmoniously to produce splendid collective works, such as the Stanze in the
Vatican.
In sum, Vasari
praises Raphael not only as a virtuoso painter but also as a virtuoso and
career-long learner. Raphael’s capacity
for professional learning and collaboration and his readiness to change his own
style seem to have supported his meteoric reputational ascent. The Renaissance
was a period of technical innovation in painting processes but also of change
in the ‘consumption’ of painting.
Artists were experimenting with painting processes, with paints, with
surfaces, with subjects and ideas and customers, at least some of them, were
commissioning and paying for these experiments. Raphael, it seems, was ready to profit from these
changes: he quickly picked up on the
innovations of Michelangelo, Durer and Leonardo and partially assimilated
them. He extended and refreshed his own
repertoire by collaborating with innovative architects and engravers.
Raphael’s lifelong learning,
in Vasari’s biography, is informal and life-wide: it is structured by personal relationships – with
his father, his master, Perugino and his rival Michelangelo. It is shaped by his movements around Italy,
from Urbino to Perugia, on to Florence and then to Rome. His learning was embedded into his work as an
artist, and it followed the itinerary of his career – Raphael learnt when he
felt challenged or inspired by fellow artists or chose to work with them or
because he responded to the ambitions of his clients.