Did Renaissance master give himself a nose job?

Reuters
Raphael probably didn't like his nose, and replaced it with an idealized version in his famous self-portrait.
Reuters
Did Renaissance master give himself a nose job?
Reuters

A combination picture shows a still image taken from a video of an animation of a 3D computer reconstruction of face of Renaissance master Raphael from a plaster cast of his skull, in Rome, Italy. 

Raphael probably didn’t like his nose, and replaced it with an idealized version in his famous self-portrait.

That is the conclusion of Rome University scientists who produced a 3D computer reconstruction of the Renaissance master’s face from a plaster cast of his presumed skull. The cast was made in 1833.

In that year, the remains believed to be those of the man hailed by his contemporaries as “the divine one” because he sought perfection through his work were last exhumed.

“He certainly made his nose look more refined,” said Professor Mattia Falconi, a molecular biologist at the university’s Tor Vergata campus.

“His nose was, let’s say, slightly more prominent.”

Raphael died in Rome in 1520 aged 37, probably from pneumonia, and was buried in Rome’s Pantheon.

The self-portrait, which normally hangs in Florence’s Uffizi gallery but is currently in Rome for an exhibition marking the 500th anniversary of his death, was done about 15 years earlier, when he was clean-shaven.

It features the more aquiline nose that Raphael also included in other works in which he painted himself.

The reconstruction is of the way he may have looked closer to his death, when he wore a beard.

Falconi, along with forensic anthropologists and other experts, reconstructed the face with tissue layering techniques used by crime investigators.

The result was a face similar to that of the master on an engraving by Marcantonio Raimondi, one of his students.

“When we finished, I said to myself ‘I’ve seen that face before,’” Falconi, 57, said.

Another similarity is with the subject of “Portrait of a Man.”

That work was painted between 1512 and 1515 by Sebastiano del Piombo, a Raphael contemporary and rival.


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