Stephanie Storey's Blog
March 26, 2020
Images for Readers of Raphael
If you're an ebook reader, your version of Raphael, Painter in Rome will come with links to the artwork as it's mentioned (I spent days personally adding in these links whenever it was most appropriate to the story). However, if you're reading a physical book, you'll obviously miss out on these links.
So, I spent last weekend creating a page on my website for those of you reading Raphael in hardcover, so you can follow along with images, as the artwork is referenced in the book.
I hope this page will help readers connect more easily with Raphael's art and inspire people to learn about this brilliant, beautiful painter of perfection...
"Even when it all seems futile, some of us must never stop trying to bend the world toward beauty."
So, I spent last weekend creating a page on my website for those of you reading Raphael in hardcover, so you can follow along with images, as the artwork is referenced in the book.
I hope this page will help readers connect more easily with Raphael's art and inspire people to learn about this brilliant, beautiful painter of perfection...
"Even when it all seems futile, some of us must never stop trying to bend the world toward beauty."
Published on March 26, 2020 17:47
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Tags:
painter-in-rome, raphael
June 22, 2019
New Novel Coming April 2020
It's finally official. My new novel is:
It will be published (once again by Arcade) in April 2020 in time for the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death (he died on April 6, 1520).
Raphael. Even if you consider yourself a complete art amateur, you recognize the name. Raphael IS a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle after all. You probably know he’s a painter. Maybe you could place him in the Italian Renaissance or the Vatican. Maybe you even know that he painted those oh-so-famous putti (see above) that you see on coffee mugs and coasters and Christmas ornaments…
But not so long ago, Raphael was one of the most famous artists in the world — like George Clooney or Oprah. He was part of the triumvirate of the Italian Renaissance masters: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael. Raphael was the artist every other artist aspired to be. Raphael was the pinnacle of perfection.
So what happened? Why do we now know of him primarily as a cartoon turtle instead of one of the greatest painters EVER?
Maybe we take Raphael for granted. Like Shakespeare with language or the Beatles with music, Raphael gave us our ideals in imagery; when we imagine a ‘perfect painting,’ we picture a Raphael, whether we know it or not. When we imagine a ‘perfect Madonna,’ it’s a Raphael that comes unconsciously to mind. Modern images are either a reference to a Raphael or a reaction against one…
According to The Guardian, maybe Raphael’s paintings are too perfect for us. Maybe his personality was too perfect: too kind, too polite, too much of a courtier — not enough angst to appeal to our modern sensibilities.
But the problem is Raphael wasn’t so perfect. He was orphaned at age 11 and from what I can see by the desperate perfectionism in his drawings, he likely suffered from what we would today call OCD. Besides, what human being is as perfect as a Raphael painting? What human DOESN’T feel anger and jealousy and fear and desperation? We all feel these things. Why should Raphael be any different.
This new novel primarily covers the years when Raphael was working in the Vatican, just down the hall from a guy by the name of Michelangelo, painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling. We’ve all heard the agony and ecstasy that Michelangelo faced during these years, but we’ve never seen this story from the POV of Michelangelo’s fiercest rival — the young, brilliant painter of perfection, Raphael.
So, come April 2020, I look forward to reintroducing you to the flawed, struggling, loving, funny HUMAN BEING that is Raphael. And if you’re already an art nerd like me and plenty familiar, I look forward to showing him to you in a new light — I hope — and making you fall in love all over again with history’s most perfect painter.
Raphael, Painter in Rome.
It will be published (once again by Arcade) in April 2020 in time for the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death (he died on April 6, 1520).
Raphael. Even if you consider yourself a complete art amateur, you recognize the name. Raphael IS a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle after all. You probably know he’s a painter. Maybe you could place him in the Italian Renaissance or the Vatican. Maybe you even know that he painted those oh-so-famous putti (see above) that you see on coffee mugs and coasters and Christmas ornaments…
But not so long ago, Raphael was one of the most famous artists in the world — like George Clooney or Oprah. He was part of the triumvirate of the Italian Renaissance masters: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael. Raphael was the artist every other artist aspired to be. Raphael was the pinnacle of perfection.
So what happened? Why do we now know of him primarily as a cartoon turtle instead of one of the greatest painters EVER?
Maybe we take Raphael for granted. Like Shakespeare with language or the Beatles with music, Raphael gave us our ideals in imagery; when we imagine a ‘perfect painting,’ we picture a Raphael, whether we know it or not. When we imagine a ‘perfect Madonna,’ it’s a Raphael that comes unconsciously to mind. Modern images are either a reference to a Raphael or a reaction against one…
According to The Guardian, maybe Raphael’s paintings are too perfect for us. Maybe his personality was too perfect: too kind, too polite, too much of a courtier — not enough angst to appeal to our modern sensibilities.
But the problem is Raphael wasn’t so perfect. He was orphaned at age 11 and from what I can see by the desperate perfectionism in his drawings, he likely suffered from what we would today call OCD. Besides, what human being is as perfect as a Raphael painting? What human DOESN’T feel anger and jealousy and fear and desperation? We all feel these things. Why should Raphael be any different.
This new novel primarily covers the years when Raphael was working in the Vatican, just down the hall from a guy by the name of Michelangelo, painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling. We’ve all heard the agony and ecstasy that Michelangelo faced during these years, but we’ve never seen this story from the POV of Michelangelo’s fiercest rival — the young, brilliant painter of perfection, Raphael.
So, come April 2020, I look forward to reintroducing you to the flawed, struggling, loving, funny HUMAN BEING that is Raphael. And if you’re already an art nerd like me and plenty familiar, I look forward to showing him to you in a new light — I hope — and making you fall in love all over again with history’s most perfect painter.
Published on June 22, 2019 08:20
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Tags:
art, art-historical-thriller, art-history, artists, historical-fiction, italian-renaissance, michelangelo, oil-and-marble, papal-apartments, raphael, raphael-rooms, rome, school-of-athens, sistine-chapel, vatican