Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints
Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi), ca. 1504
About this artwork
Raphael's *Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints*, created around 1504 when the artist was just 21, exemplifies the early mastery of the High Renaissance. This grand altarpiece features the Virgin Mary and Christ Child seated on a throne, surrounded by Saints Catherine, John the Baptist, Paul, and Peter, with angels attending above in a lunette. The square main panel (nearly 68 inches across) and arched lunette create a harmonious, monumental composition typical of Italian church decorations, inviting worshippers into a serene heavenly gathering known as a *sacra conversazione*. Painted in oil and gold on wood, the work blends innovative oil techniques for luminous depth and realistic modeling with traditional gold leaf, which imbues the figures with a divine glow reminiscent of medieval icons. Raphael's precise drawing and balanced proportions foreshadow his later masterpieces like the Sistine Madonna, showcasing his Perugino training while pushing toward Renaissance ideals of grace and humanism. A gift to the Metropolitan Museum of Art from J. Pierpont Morgan in 1916, this piece highlights Raphael's rapid rise and the enduring cultural reverence for Marian devotion in early 16th-century Italy. (198 words)