China Daily

Rome’s Raphael exhibition to reopen

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ROME — An exhibition commemorat­ing the 500th anniversar­y of the death of the Renaissanc­e artist Raphael will reopen on June 2 in Rome and will run until Aug 30.

Original plans for the show were reschedule­d due to the COVID-19 lockdown.

The exhibition at the Scuderie del Quirinale Gallery opened on March 5 but closed just three days later as COVID-19 spread across Italy.

It was initially scheduled to end on June 2.

But organizers said in a statement on Monday that they’d reached an agreement with museums around the world, including Madrid’s Prado, London’s National Gallery and the Washington National Gallery of Art, to extend the loans of their masterpiec­es for three months.

Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, known in the English-speaking world as Raphael, was born in 1483 and died at just 37 after a sudden illness in Rome. He was one of the most celebrated artists of his age.

“The exhibition offers the opportunit­y to admire a concentrat­ion of Raphael works that we have never seen in the same venue,” says Eike Schmidt, director of Florence’s Uffizi museum.

“We are very happy to extend the loan of about 50 masterpiec­es for as long as necessary,” he adds.

During the lockdown the artworks have been covered up but the exhibition has never been dismantled because the curators had hoped for a restart.

Some 70,000 tickets had been sold in online sales before the first opening to the public, for an exhibition that brings together 204 works of art, including 120 by Raphael himself.

As the number of daily COVID-19 cases and deaths decreases, the government is relaxing lockdown restrictio­ns imposed to curb the spread of the virus. However, social distancing rules remain quite stringent and only a very few people at a time will be admitted to the show.

 ?? AP ?? Visitors take photos of a Raphael’s painting at a media preview of Raphael’s exhibition in Rome on March 4.
AP Visitors take photos of a Raphael’s painting at a media preview of Raphael’s exhibition in Rome on March 4.

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