The Raising of Lazarus (Sebastiano del Piombo)

The Raising of Lazarus
ArtistSebastiano del Piombo
Year1517–1519
MediumOil on wood, transferred to canvas
Dimensions381 cm × 299 cm (150 in × 118 in)
LocationNational Gallery, London
Raphael's Transfiguration, Vatican Pinacoteca

The Raising of Lazarus is a large altarpiece of 1517–1519 by the Italian High Renaissance artist Sebastiano del Piombo, for which Michelangelo supplied drawings for some figures. Intended for Narbonne Cathedral in France, it is now normally in Room 18 of the National Gallery in London, where it is "NG1", the first painting catalogued at the founding of the gallery in 1824.

It was commissioned by Cardinal Giulio de' Medici, then Archbishop of Narbonne and later Pope Clement VII (r. 1523–24), in what was effectively a contest engineered by Michelangelo, using Sebastiano as "a kind of deputy",[1] or "cat's paw",[2] in a rivalry between the two and Raphael, whose Transfiguration (now in the Vatican Pinacoteca) is the same size of 381 cm × 299 cm (150 in × 118 in) and was commissioned for the same cathedral. The verdict of Roman critical opinion was that Raphael's painting won.

According to Michael Levey, the painting is "a tour de force of massed, gesticulating bodies and glittering colour ... Perhaps all the elements have not been quite successfully fused, but the grand manner of the composition is impressive, and in its conscious rhetoric the painting looks forward to the Baroque."[3]

Sebastiano, who had arrived in Rome from Venice in 1511,[4] may have intended to dazzle the Roman critics with the colouring for which the Venetian School was famous, giving "the greatest and most subtly varied range of colours ever seen in a single painting".[5] However, the complicated restoration history of the painting, and aspects of Sebastiano's technique combined with effects of age, have led to a general darkening of the painting, and significant changes in some of the large number of colour shades.[6]

  1. ^ Freedberg, 111
  2. ^ Langmuir, 150
  3. ^ Levey, 62
  4. ^ Lucco
  5. ^ NGTB, 36
  6. ^ NGTB, throughout