A must-see exhibition of international scope, on show from 27 January to 6 May 2018, this is a unique opportunity to get to know and admire the work of a great master born five hundred years ago.

An exciting exhibition that restores Raphael to his rightful place as a true legend.

The Raffaello e l’eco del mito exhibition takes its cue from the Saint Sebastian, a masterpiece by the young Raphael in the collection of the Accademia Carrara in Bergamo.

The Raffaello e l’Eco del Mito exhibition takes its cue from the Saint Sebastian, a masterpiece by the young Raphael in the Accademia Carrara collection. The exhibition paints a full picture of Raphael’s training and retraces the extraordinary success of the artist since the nineteenth century, when the precious painting arrived in Bergamo.

The exhibition begins with an investigation of Raphael’s cultural roots in Urbino, Perugia and Siena. In the sophisticated Court of Montefeltro in Urbino, the artist absorbed and made his own the ideas that came both from his colleagues and from antiquity, in a highly personal style of the very highest quality. The climate of the court can be seen in the works of his father Giovanni Santi, and in those of Pedro Berruguete, Perugino and Pinturicchio, which are compared with no fewer than twelve paintings by Raphael from museums in Italy and abroad.

The fascinating subject of Raphael’s success in the nineteenth century is examined in the second part of the exhibition. The arrival of the Saint Sebastian in the collection of Guglielmo Lochis in 1836 coincided with a renewal of interest in Raphael’s personal life and artistic career: on the one hand, there was the finding of his mortal remains in the Pantheon in 1833, and on the other a renewed interest in the mysterious Fornarina. Around this masterpiece, the works of Anthon Raphael Mengs, Peter Cornelius, Felice Schiavoni, and others show how the legend of the artist took hold in the nineteenth century.

The interest in Raphael has continued unabated through the twentieth century and up to the present day. De Chirico and Picasso, Luigi Ontani and Giulio Paolini, Vanessa Beecroft and Francesco Vezzoli are some of the artists who have looked to Raphael and his legend. Their works have varied widely, ranging from re-use to quotation, and deference to devotion, but they all show how the master from Urbino is still very much alive in the contemporary world.