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The
School of Athens (1509)
Raphael
(1483-1520)
Fresco; Vaticano, Stanza della Segnatura,
Rome
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The School of Athens is a depiction of
philosophy. The scene takes place in classical
times, as both the architecture and the garments
indicate. Figures representing each subject that
must be mastered in order to hold a true
philosophic debate - astronomy, geometry,
arithmetic, and solid geometry - are depicted in
concrete form. The arbiters of this rule, the main
figures, Plato and Aristotle, are shown in the
centre, engaged in such a dialogue.
The School of Athens represents the truth
acquired through reason. Raphael does not entrust
his illustration to allegorical figures, as was
customary in the 14th and 15th centuries. Rather,
he groups the solemn figures of thinkers and
philosophers together in a large, grandiose
architectural framework. This framework is
characterized by a high dome, a vault with lacunar
ceiling and pilasters. It is probably inspired by
late Roman architecture or - as most critics
believe - by Bramante's project for the new St
Peter's which is itself a symbol of the synthesis
of pagan and Christian philosophies.
The figures who dominate the composition do not
crowd the environment, nor are they suffocated by
it. Rather, they underline the breadth and depth of
the architectural structures. The protagonists -
Plato, represented with a white beard (some people
identify this solemn old man with Leonardo da
Vinci) and Aristotle - are both characterized by a
precise and meaningful pose. Raphael's descriptive
capacity, in contrast to that visible in the
allegories of earlier painters, is such that the
figures do not pay homage to, or group around the
symbols of knowledge; they do not form a parade.
They move, act, teach, discuss and become
excited.
The painting celebrates classical thought, but
it is also dedicated to the liberal arts,
symbolized by the statues of Apollo and Minerva.
Grammar, Arithmetic and Music are personified by
figures located in the foreground, at left.
Geometry and Astronomy are personified by the
figures in the foreground, at right. Behind them
stand characters representing Rhetoric and
Dialectic. Some of the ancient philosophers bear
the features of Raphael's contemporaries. Bramante
is shown as Euclid (in the foreground, at right,
leaning over a tablet and holding a compass).
Leonardo is, as we said, probably shown as Plato.
Francesco Maria Della Rovere appears once again
near Bramante, dressed in white. Michelangelo,
sitting on the stairs and leaning on a block of
marble, is represented as Heraclitus. A close
examination of the intonaco shows that Heraclitus
was the last figure painted when the fresco was
completed, in 1511. The allusion to Michelangelo is
probably a gesture of homage to the artist, who had
recently unveiled the frescoes of the Sistine
Ceiling. Raphael - at the extreme right, with a
dark hat - and his friend, Sodoma, are also present
(they exemplify the glorification of the fine arts
and they are posed on the same level as the liberal
arts).
The fresco achieved immediate success. Its
beauty and its thematic unity were universally
accepted. The enthusiasm with which it was received
was not marred by reservations, as was the public
reaction to the Sistine Ceiling.
The
Detail in the Center of the
Painting
Raphael's intention here is to show the paths of
Knowledge.
In the center of the composition are two
characters.
One, Plato, raising his finger to the sky,
holding one of his last dialogues, The
Timaeus, in his hand. The other, Aristotle,
lowering his hand to the earth, holding
Ethics in his hand.
They represent two paths, two approaches: Plato,
going from reality to the Ideal, from earth to the
philosophical ideal, and the other, Aristotle,
showing the philosophical ideal which can only
exist in his illustration of this world.
Transcendency and immanence are represented
through these two characters.
Around them, Raphael has gathered the great
thinkers of all times. Especially those from
Antiquity, giving them the faces of some of his
contemporaries.
Without going into detail, let us look at some
of the important characters.
Heraclitus. Diogenes, disregarding everything
and disregarded by all. Socrates, perfectly
recognizable by his satyr's face, surrounded by
Alexander the Great, Alcibiadies and other
disciples Euclid, with Bramante's face, giving a
mathematical demonstration along with Zoroaster,
who mastered the knowledge of the sky, and Ptolemy,
who mastered the knowledge of the earth. On the
left, Averroes, recognizable by his white turban,
who introduced our world to Eastern knowledge. In
the foreground, Pythagoras and Anaxagoras of
Miletus, then a florid Epicurus, crowned with
vines.
Each one of them represents an encyclopedia of
knowledge, in which Raphael has not forgotten
himself. He is at the far right, dressed in black,
accompanied by a young man dressed in white,
Sodoma, the painter. Raphael pays homage to
Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci by giving their
features to Heraclitus and Plato.
The most brilliant part is the architecture at
the top of the work, which is completely due to
Bramante. These are exactly the same coffers as the
ones which Bramante was raising in the new Saint
Peter's Basilica, which was then taking
form.
It must have been phenomenal to have
Michelangelo, painting the Sistine Chapel,
Bramante, raising domes and colonnades and Leonardo
da Vinci, prowling the corridors and looking for
work, as one's close neighbors. Julius II was a
very lucky man.
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