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  1. Video transcript. (music playing) Beth: And here we have Julius II, painted by Rafael. Julius II, the great patron of the high Renaissance, and it's thanks to Julius that we have, oh gosh, so many things. The ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, the Basilica of Saint Peter's, Rafael's frescoes in the Stanza.

    • 4 min
    • Beth Harris,Steven Zucker
  2. Last years in Rome of Raphael. Raphael was called to Rome toward the end of 1508 by Pope Julius II at the suggestion of the architect Donato Bramante. At this time Raphael was little known in Rome, but the young man soon made a deep impression on the volatile Julius and the papal court, and his authority as a master grew day by day. Raphael was ...

  3. Nov 25, 2000 · Pope Julius II, Raphael (1511-12) · View the work online. Artist: Raphaelo Sanzio of Urbino (1483-1520), called to Rome in 1508 to work in the Vatican. Along with Leonardo and Michelangelo, he ...

  4. The Pope commissioned Raphael and his studio in 1508-1509 to decorate the interiors of rooms. The Stanze is located right above Alexander’s Borgia Apartment on the third floor of the Palace of the Vatican, overlooking the south side of the Belvedere Courtyard. After the death of Julius II in 1513, only two rooms were finished, but Pope Leo X ...

  5. Portrait of Pope Julius II is an oil portrait of 1511–12 by the Italian High Renaissance painter Raphael. It has 101 x 83 cm dimensions, and you can find the artwork in Room IX of the Borghese Gallery. History. The portrait of Pope Julius II was bizarre for its time and would carry a prolonged impact on papal portraiture.

  6. In fact, he seems to be drawing a geometric diagram for some very eager students. But he is interested in measure, that is the idea of the practical. - [Voiceover] Euclid is modeled actually on a friend of Raphael's and that's Bramante the great architect asked by Pope Julius II to provide a new model for a new Saint Peter's.

  7. Aug 20, 2020 · A portrait of Pope Julius II (r. 1503-1513 CE) by the Italian Renaissance artist Raphael, c. 1512 CE. (National Gallery London)

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