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Raphael in Lisbon

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Raphael paintings in Lisbon

Italian · 1483–1520

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1 work across 1 institution

Lisbon's National Museum of Ancient Art holds 1 work by Raphael (1483–1520) — the city's entire known holding of this artist in a single institution.

Raphael died at 37 but left a body of work that established the ideal of the High Renaissance: perfect compositional balance, idealised beauty, and emotional clarity. Born in Urbino, he worked in Perugia, Florence, and Rome, where his Vatican frescoes — including The School of Athens — remain in situ.

National Museum of Ancient Art

💎 Hidden Gem

Lisbon · 1 work on display

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St. Eusebius Resurrecting Three People

St. Eusebius Resurrecting Three People

National Museum of Ancient Art

c. 1502

LisbonWikidata

About the artist

Raphael

Italian · High Renaissance · 1483–1520

Raphael died at 37 but left a body of work that established the ideal of the High Renaissance: perfect compositional balance, idealised beauty, and emotional clarity. Born in Urbino, he worked in Perugia, Florence, and Rome, where his Vatican frescoes — including The School of Athens — remain in situ.

Key works

The School of AthensSistine MadonnaThe Transfiguration
See all Raphael paintings worldwide

Frequently asked questions

How many Raphael paintings are on display in Lisbon?

Our current data shows 1 Raphael painting on display in Lisbon, held at the National Museum of Ancient Art.

Which museum in Lisbon has the most Raphael paintings?

National Museum of Ancient Art holds all 1 known Raphael work in Lisbon.

Where else can I see Raphael's paintings?

Raphael's paintings are distributed across museums in multiple countries. Our artist page lists every city in our collection where their work is currently on display — use it to plan a multi-city trip or find works closer to home. Browse all cities for Raphael

Planning your visit to Lisbon

Lisbon's museums are hilly and require trams or taxis to move between efficiently. The Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga and the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum are both world-class but widely separated — plan one per day. Entry to national museums is free on Sunday mornings.

Artwork data sourced from Wikidata. Coverage varies — always confirm with the museum before visiting.