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Raphael in the Vatican: A Special Year for the Vatican Museums, a Zoom Webinar by Barbara Jatta, Director of the Vatican Museums

Raphael in the Vatican: A Special Year for the Vatican Museums, a Zoom Webinar by Barbara Jatta, Director of the Vatican Museums
Presented by the Italian Cultural Institutes of North America and Canada

Tuesday, November 10th at 1pm Central Time

raffaello 500

On the occasion of the 500th anniversary of Raffaello Sanzio’s death, while we wait for cultural institutions to overcome these difficult times, the network of Italian Cultural Institutes in the US and Canada celebrate the master through several online initiatives.

The year 2020 marks the celebration of the 500th anniversary of the death of the universally acclaimed master of art, Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino. It is a special year for the Vatican Museums because it is here that Raphael’s most important series of frescoes are preserved. The museum also hosts three altarpieces fundamental to an understanding of Raphael’s different artistic phases and the progression of his career in Rome—around 1508—until his premature and sudden death in 1520. Barbara Jatta will discuss Raphael’s Vatican works and the challenges of celebrating this important anniversary during a world pandemic.

This presentation is moderated by Professor Emanuele Lugli, Stanford University.

Born in Rome in 1962, Barbara Jatta obtained a degree in Art History and Literature in 1986 with a thesis on the History of Drawing, Engraving and Graphics from La Sapienza University of Rome, where she completed a three-year specialized degree in Art History. She undertook internships in England, Portugal, and in the United States, collaborated with the Italian National Institute for Graphic Design, first as a restorer of graphic materials and then by cataloguing the Institute’s portfolios of drawings, engravings, woodcuts and lithographs. She has been teaching at various institutions since the ’90s. In 2010 she was appointed Curator of Prints at the Vatican.

Emanuele Lugli teaches and writes about late medieval and early modern art, with a particular emphasis in Italian painting, trade, urban culture, and history of fashion.

Registration is required. Register here.

  • Organizzato da: Italian Cultural Institutes of North America and C