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Monday, May 5, 2025 |
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Paul Holberton Publishing announces 'Raphael & the Pope's Librarian' |
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Published in commemoration of the 500th anniversary of Raphaels death.
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LONDON.- Published in commemoration of the 500th anniversary of Raphaels death, this engrossing book accompanies an exhibition at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Raphael and the Popes Librarian brings together for the first time one of the most fascinating works in the museums collection the Gardner Museums portrait of papal librarian Tommaso Inghirami and a painting from the Vatican Museums depicting an episode in his life. This book tells the story of Isabella Stewart Gardner's purchase of the first Raphael in America and explores Inghiramis fascinating career.
Nearly five centuries after his death in 1520, Raphaels fame remains undiminished. Crowned prince of painters by Giorgio Vasari, he inspired both artists of his own time and others for centuries afterward. According to the celebrated writer Henry James, Raphaels work was semi-sacred. Gilded Age American collectors swooned over his iconic religious images and masterly brushwork, and Jamess contemporaries feverishly tried and failed to acquire Raphaels rare paintings in a market flooded with copies, and the occasional forgery.
Isabella Stewart Gardner took up the challenge, determined to buy a magnificent Madonna by Raphael. Following her gripping hunt, Gardner was the first collector to bring a work by Raphael to America, where its unexpected subject led to a mixed reception and generated surprising rumors in the years to follow. Despite any hesitations over the paintings beauty, Gardner named an entire gallery of her new Boston museum after the Renaissance master and installed many of her most celebrated works of art around his portrait of the rotund cleric Tommaso Inghirami.
Described by Erasmus as the Cicero of our era, Inghirami was a high Renaissance celebrity esteemed for his profound erudition and theatrical abilities. His unparalleled knowledge and understanding of classics made him the ideal choice for Vatican Librarian under Pope Julius II. Yet he achieved a lasting fame on stage, playing a leading role in the revival of ancient theatre and acquiring the nickname Fedra after starring as the lovesick Queen of Athens in Senecas Greek tragedy Hippolytus (Phaedra). Inghiramis friend Raphael offered him another role, recasting the Renaissance humanist as the congenial philosopher Epicurius in his legendary School of Athens fresco before memorializing him in the more worldly painted portrait at the center of this exhibition.
Raphael and the Popes Librarian is the latest in the Close Up series of books accompanying a Gardner exhibition series, each instalment of which sheds new light on an outstanding work of art in the permanent collection.
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