ROME (Reuters) - Raphael probably didn't like his nose, and replaced it with an idealised version in his famous self-portrait. That is the conclusion of Rome University scientists who produced a 3D ...
Raphael's famed Uffizi self-portrait and the new facial reconstruction Public domain / Tor Vergata University of Rome Five hundred years after Raphael’s passing, the Italian artist continues to make ...
One of the greatest artists of the Italian Renaissance is now the subject of the first comprehensive exhibition of his work ...
Raphael had a deviated view of his own septum. The 15th-century Italian-born master painter — famous for his work on St. Peter’s Basilica and his lifelike figure drawings — painted himself with a ...
Italian researchers have created a 3D reconstruction of the face of Renaissance master Raphael, which they say proves once and for all that the artist was buried in the Pantheon in Rome. But ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Scientists make 3-D reconstruction of face of Renaissance master Raphael ROME (Reuters) - Raphael probably didn't like his nose, ...