
Portrait of Raphael
Historical Context
This Portrait of Raphael from 1820 at the Musee Ingres reflects Ingres's profound veneration of the Renaissance master whom he considered the supreme painter. Copying and reimagining Raphael was central to Ingres's artistic identity and his advocacy for classical standards against the Romantic movement. Ingres's portraits are among the supreme achievements of nineteenth-century French painting, combining his absolute mastery of line and surface — the legacy of his training under David and his long study of Raphael — with a psychological acuity that could seem almost brutal in its refusal of conventional flattery. His portrait subjects — the bourgeois elite of post-Revolutionary France, the aristocracy that survived and the new class that replaced them — are rendered with a precision of observation that makes their individuality indelible. Each Ingres portrait is simultaneously a celebration of technical mastery and a penetrating social document of the class it represents.
Technical Analysis
The portrait recreates Raphael's features with Ingres's precise, polished technique. The smooth handling and idealized treatment pay homage to the Renaissance master through the language of Neo-classical perfection.
Look Closer
- ◆Ingres's portrait of Raphael is an imaginary reconstruction — no reliable contemporary likeness existed for him to work from.
- ◆The idealized features follow Ingres's own physical ideal for the Renaissance master — beauty as a matter of ideological conviction.
- ◆The Renaissance costume — slashed doublet, soft cap — is rendered with careful historical accuracy and loving material attention.
- ◆The gaze is directed slightly past the viewer — the historical artist looking beyond us toward a greatness we can only admire.
See It In Person
More by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

Madame Jacques-Louis Leblanc (Françoise Poncelle, 1788–1839)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·1823

Portrait of Luigi Edouardo Rossi, Count Pellegrino
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·c. 1820

Edmond Cavé (1794–1852)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·1844
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Madame Edmond Cavé (Marie-Élisabeth Blavot, born 1810)
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·ca. 1831–34



