The Madonna of Foligno is a painting by the Italian High Renaissance painter Raphael. First painted on [[Panel painting|wood panel, it was later transferred to canvas. It was moved by Anna Conti, a descendent of Sigismondi Conti, to the monastery of St. Anne in Foligno in 1565 and remained there for more than two centuries, hence the name. In 1799 it was carried to Paris, France by Napoleon. There, in 1802, the painting was transferred from panel to canvas by Hacquin and restored by Roser of Heidelberg. The process to transfer a painting from wood panel to canvas was so rare that special note... was made by the restorer: "Rapporto dei cittadini Guijon Vincent Tannay e Berthollet sul ristauro dei quadri di Raffaello conosciuto sotto il nome di Madonna di Foligno." In 1815, after the Battle of Waterloo, it was returned to Italy, where it was placed in the room with the Transfiguration in the Pinacoteca Vaticana of the Vatican Museum in the Vatican City. The painting was executed for Sigismondo de' Conti, chamberlain to Pope Julius II, in 1511.
more
| Artist: | Raphael |
| Artform: | Painting |
| Date completed: | 1511 |